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Rotoworld

  • LAD Shortstop #74
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    Dodgers signed INF Brendon Davis to a minor league contract.
    Davis heads to Los Angeles as extra infield depth after being released by the Tigers last July. The 26-year-old was a notable prospect a few years ago with the Angels when he launched 30 homers across a couple minor league levels during the 2021 season. He’s a low-risk lottery ticket for the Dodgers.
  • ARI Relief Pitcher #18
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    Shelby Miller allowed an unearned run to pick up a loss to the Giants on Wednesday.
    The run is unearned because it came in the 10th inning and it was the “zombie” runner who crossed the plate. It came on a sac fly from Andrew Bailey, and he didn’t allow a hit. It’s a loss for Miller — the third of the season — but at least it’s not a blown save and it didn’t hurt his ERA at all. We always look for positives. Miller has provided a good number of them thus far in 2025 to the surprise of most.
    How Carpenter's injury impacts Tigers' DH spot
    Eric Samulski breaks down the impacts of Kerry Carpenter's injury for the Detroit Tigers, highlighting which players fan can expect to step up and how the team will rotate its DH spot.
  • SF Relief Pitcher #75
    Camilo Doval worked two innings and allowed two runs while blowing a save and picking up a win against the Diamondbacks on Wednesday.
    Doval gave up a two-run homer in the ninth inning to blow his fourth save on the season. The good news is that he worked a scoreless 10th to get the win, but fantasy managers would have preferred he just get the job done an inning earlier. Even after allowing the two runs, Doval has a 3.03 ERA and doesn’t seem likely to be giving up his closing gig just yet.
  • ARI Starting Pitcher #29
    Merrill Kelly didn’t pick up a decision after allowing three runs Wednesday over six innings against the Giants on Wednesday.
    Kelly gave up two runs in the first, but settled down nicely after while giving up just one more in the fifth. The 36-year-old was not good during Friday’s start against Miami, but he bounced back the way he usually does after a clunker. Kelly will take on the Padres on Monday in what likely be his penultimate start before the All-Star break.
  • SF Relief Pitcher #65
    Landen Rupp worked four innings and struck out four while allowing two runs against the Diamondbacks on Wednesday.
    Roupp had command issues for the majority of the contest, and ended up issuing four free passes. The stuff was decent, the ability to locate it? Not so much. Roupp now has a 3.48 ERA and will look to hit his spots on a more consistent basis against the Phillies on Monday.
  • LAD 3rd Baseman #13
    The Dodgers are holding out hope that Max Muncy’s knee injury sustained Wednesday is only a sprain.
    Dave Roberts said the team was “optimistic” after initial testing, which is good news. Torn ACLs tend to be easy to diagnose, and the Dodgers should already know whether or not his intact. Either way, Muncy will have an MRI on Thursday and is surely IL bound after putting himself in a really bad spot with Michael A. Taylor sliding headfirst into third base. Hyeseong Kim and Enrique Hernández will likely pick up his at-bats.
  • LAD Catcher #16
    Will Smith hit a solo homer in a win for the Dodgers on Wednesday over the White Sox.
    Smith also drew a walk. The 30-year-old was named the starter behind the plate for the National League to the surprise of absolutely no one, and he’s earned with with 11 homers, 44 RBI and a .972 OPS.
  • CWS Left Fielder #15
    Austin Slater hit a homer and triple in a loss to the Dodgers on Wednesday.
    It’s the first triple as a member of the White Sox for Slater, and the homer was his third. The veteran outfielder will likely see interest on the trade market as a player who hits left-handers well for a team that has no shot of winning in 2025.
  • LAD 1st Baseman #5
    Freddie Freeman hit a walk-off single in the ninth inning to give the Dodgers a 5-4 victory over the White Sox on Wednesday.
    With the score tied at 4-4, Freeman singled in Shohei Ohtani to give the Dodgers the win on a day that will best be remembered for Clayton Kershaw picking up strikeout number 3,000. Freeman is now hitting .309/.381/.500 on the season, and it seems pretty likely he’ll be joining Kershaw in Cooperstown someday.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #22
    Clayton Kershaw struck out three while allowing four runs over six innings in a no-decision against the White Sox on Wednesday.
    Kershaw becomes the 21st player in MLB history to reach 3,000 strikeouts in the start. The 37-year-old was not terribly effective despite that milestone as he gave up nine hits and one walk against a lineup that isn’t exactly competing for world titles right now. Still, a pretty impressive accomplishment. He’ll look to add to that punchout total next week against the Brew Crew, with that start against Milwaukee scheduled for Monday.
  • CWS Starting Pitcher #59
    Sean Burke struck out five over six innings of one-run baseball against the Dodgers on Wednesday.
    Burke worked behind opener Brandon Eisert fired one inning, and in Burke’s first frame he gave up a solo homer to Andy Pages. From that point on, the 25-year-old was excellent; holding the Dodgers to just five more hits in an impressive outing even before considering the opponent and low expectations. He likely will work in a similar fashion Monday when he faces off against the Blue Jays.