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Rotoworld

  • OAK Relief Pitcher #65
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    Trevor May slammed the door on the Rangers in the ninth inning on Friday night, preserving a three-run advantage to earn his 19th save of the season.
    The 33-year-old hurler did allow a two-out single to Mitch Garver, but battled back to get Jonah Heim on line out to right field to end it. After a brutal start to the season, May has actually settled in and pitched pretty well for the A’s, bringing some stability to the back end of what has been a historically bad bullpen. He now holds a 3.83 ERA, 1.50 WHIP and a 33/28 K/BB ratio over 40 1/3 innings on the year.
  • FA Starting Pitcher #44
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    Cardinals declined their $12 million club option on RHP Kyle Gibson for 2025.
    He’ll receive a $1 buyout and will now enter free agency. Gibson will be 38 years old next season and is coming off a year in which he posted a 4.24 ERA, 1.35 WHIP, and 151/68 K/BB ratio in 169 2/3 innings. He is likely to find a short deal somewhere.
  • FA Starting Pitcher #31
    St. Louis Cardinals did not pick up the team option on RHP Lance Lynn
    Lynn has a $1 million buyout and will now enter free agency coming off a season in which he posted a 3.84 ERA, 1.34 WHIP, and 109/44 K/BB ratio in 117 1/3 innings. He should be able to find a prove-it deal somewhere.
  • CWS Coach #25
    White Sox officially hired Will Venable as their manager.
    Venable will be the 44th manager in White Sox franchise history. Venable played nine seasons in MLB, splitting time between the Padres, Rangers, and Dodgers before retiring after the 2016 season. He then served as a special assistant to Cubs president Theo Epstein, as well as a minor league first-base coach from 2018-2020. He then worked as the Red Sox bench coach during the 2021 and ’22 seasons and was an associate manager for the Rangers for the past two years. The Princeton graduate was involved in managerial interviews last season but decided to go back to Texas and will now take over his own team with plenty of work to be done. “Will is widely recognized as one of the premium managerial candidates within the game, and we are very excited to bring him into our organization as our new manager,” said general manager Chris Getz.
  • PHI Third Baseman
    Phillies 3B prospect Otto Kemp continues his hot hitting in Arizona Fall League action.
    The 25-year-old Kemp has four home runs and a .310/.488/.759 slash line through his first 10 games in the Arizona Fall Leagues. Kemp hit .285/.392/.489 at four minor league levels this year, and his power has been his carrying tool so far. Since Kemp went undrafted out of Point Loma Nazarene, his ascent close to the big leagues is quite a story.
  • FA Right Fielder #19
    Twins OF Alex Kirilloff announced his retirement from baseball.
    The 26-year-old announced his retirement from baseball on his Twitter account Monday morning, saying, “After nine seasons in professional baseball, I’m announcing my decision to step away from the game today...In my nine professional seasons, I’ve encountered numerous injuries, which led me to search for new ways to overcome the pain. These challenges have taken a toll on me mentally and physically; over time, I’ve realized that my passion for playing the game has shifted. Baseball demands an ‘all-in’ approach, something I’ve brought to every season. However, I can no longer give it the total commitment it requires.” A one-time top prospect, Kirilloff struggled through injuries and finished his career hitting .248 (198-for-799) with 40 doubles, five triples, 27 home runs, 116 RBI, 62 walks, two stolen bases, 92 runs scored, and a .721 OPS in 249 career games across four seasons.
  • PHI Starting Pitcher #76
    Phillies RHP prospect Andrew Painter threw three scoreless innings with three strikeouts and no walks in Wednesday’s AFL action.
    After missing the entire 2024 season while recovering from surgery, Painter has looked electric in his recent AFL starts, with a 0.90 ERA in four outings. Painter used all four pitches on Wednesday for the first time this fall. His four-seam fastball got up to 99 mph while sitting 97, and he flashed his low-80s curve, harder, upper-80s slider, and also debuted a power change-up in the low-90s. “That’s something I’ve been working on. The changeup has been the last to come and something we were looking forward to working on here. There’s an outside chance Painter could compete in the spring for a shot in the Phillies 2025 rotation.
  • NYY Left Fielder #22
    Juan Soto said he’ll be open to “every single team” as his free agency kicks off.
    With the World Series over, reporters were quick to ask Soto about his offseason plans, and the 26-year-old said, “I don’t know what’s the teams that are going to come after me... I don’t have any doors closed. I’m gonna be available for all 30 teams.” While Soto may not be closing any doors, there are certainly countless teams that, for some indefensible reason, aren’t going to offer him a contract near his value. That means there will likely be a bidding war among the big-budget teams in baseball for his services, namely the Yankees, Mets, Dodgers, Phillies, Cubs, and Blue Jays. Where he ends up will certainly be the story of the off-season.
    Will Juan Soto land the biggest contract of all-time this winter? Will any pitcher get $200 million? All of our contract predictions for this winter’s frenzy are here.
  • LAD Relief Pitcher #41
    Daniel Hudson said after Wednesday’s game that he’s intending to retire at age 37.
    Hudson was a major contributor in the Dodgers’ World Series run after tearing his ACL in 2022 and missing most of the 2023, making 65 appearances and posting a 3.00 ERA. It seems that’s going to be it for him, though. Hudson won 16 games and pitched 222 innings as a 24-year-old for the Diamondbacks in 2011, but he blew out his elbow the following season and sent the rest of his career as a reliever. He finishes up with a 3.74 ERA in 61 starts and 486 relief appearances over 15 seasons. He pitched in the postseason just three times, but two of those earned him rings, as he was also a key reliever for the Nationals in 2019.
  • LAD First Baseman #5
    Freddie Freeman was named World Series MVP after homering in four of the five games against the Yankees.
    Freeman went without a dinger tonight, snapping his personal streak of consecutive World Series games with a homer at six (he homered in the final two games of the 2021 World Series with the Braves). He did, however, have a two-run single as part of the Dodgers’ fifth-inning comeback. He drove in 12 runs in the five games, tying Bobby Richardson’s World Series record.
  • LAD Right Fielder #50
    Mookie Betts singled in a run in the fifth and delivered a go-ahead sac fly in the eighth as the Dodgers edged the Yankees 7-6 to win Game 5 and claim the World Series on Wednesday.
    The Dodgers overcame a 5-0 deficit in crazy fashion in the fifth, with Betts running hard on a squibber to first playing a key role. Anthony Rizzo looked like he’d be able to get the out by himself, causing Gerrit Cole not to cover first, but the ball was spinning away from him, and with Betts making no assumptions, he beat it out and plated the Dodgers’ first run of the game. He also knocked in the last on one of two eighth-inning sac flies. He’s not getting Series MVP honors after Freddie Freeman homered in the first four games, but he posted the best numbers of any Dodger this month, coming in at .290/.387/.565 with four homers and 16 RBI in 16 games.