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MLB Player News

Rotoworld

  • SD Relief Pitcher #76
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    Padres recalled RHP Jhony Brito from Triple-A El Paso.
    Brito replaces fellow Juan Soto trade acquisition Randy Vásquez on the roster. He had a 4.25 ERA in 41 1/3 innings out of the Padres pen before being sent down in late June. He returned to the rotation in Triple-A, but he got hurt last month and he had pitched just one inning over two starts since returning, giving up six runs — two earned — and walking five. As a result, we’re guessing this will be a short stay.
  • LAA Shortstop #7
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    Angels signed SS Tim Anderson to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Well, the Angels certainly have a type. The 31-year-old Anderson saw his production fall off a cliff in 2023 and, unfortunately, 2024 was no better as he posted a .214/.237/.226 line in 241 plate appearances with the Marlins. After being a perennial .300 hitter with 15/15 upside, Anderson has not hit over .245 in either of the last two seasons and has just one home run and 17 steals in 765 plate appearances. With Zach Neto potentially starting the year on the IL as he recovers from off-season surgery, there is a chance for Anderson to earn a starting job for a few weeks, but he will need to show far more production than he has over the last two seasons.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher
    Dodgers signed international free agent RHP Roki Sasaki to a minor-league contract with a $6.5 million signing bonus.
    The news was announced last week, but the Dodgers made the move official today. Since Sasaki is an international amateur free agent, he has to be signed to a minor league contract. That also means he’s not currently on the Dodgers’ 40-man roster. If the team eventually wants to add him to the MLB starting rotation, they will need to clear room on the 40-man roster, so expect the Dodgers to try and trade a couple of their depth pieces to free up room for Sasaki and Tanner Scott.
  • TB Shortstop #6
    Rays avoided arbitration with SS Taylor Walls by agreeing to a one-year, $1.35 million deal with an option for 2026.
    The initial arbitration filings were $1.3 from the Rays and $1.575 from Walls, so this is closer to what Tampa Bay offered. However, this new deal comes with a $2.45M club option for 2026 or a $50,000 buyout. That option can increase by $50,000 if Walls gets 450 plate appearances in 2025. While we would not expect Walls to get that many plate appearances, Tampa Bay does love his defense, so he should play multiple games a week at shortstop, which makes it harder to roster Jose Caballero in fantasy leagues. Taylor Walls himself should also not be rostered in fantasy leagues.
  • CHC Center Fielder #52
    Cubs manager Craig Counsell was asked about his lineup for 2025 and said “There’s no lineup decisions made. But, frankly, gut says no Pete [Crow-Armstrong] at the top to start the year.”
    There was some excitement for PCA in fantasy circles that his strong rookie reason and elite speed could make him a candidate to hit lead-off in Chicago, but Counsell suggests that won’t happen. At least to start the season. “I think Pete could get there,” he added. “Pete is a developing baseball player and we still want to get that right.” PCA did steal 27 bases in 123 games while hitting near the bottom of the Cubs’ lineup, so he should still run plenty in 2025 but his counting stats are going to remain subpar while hitting at the bottom of the order, and he might just be a 15 home run type of hitter at the MLB level with a mediocre batting average, so that dampens his fantasy value a bit to more of a speed-first late-round outfielder.
  • CHC Shortstop #7
    Dansby Swanson (hernia surgery) will be “fully ready for spring training.”
    Swanson had surgery in October to repair a sports hernia, which was a “nagging issue” that had been bothering him since the beginning of the 2023 season. Swanson said, “I wasn’t quite sure what it was in the beginning. That’s why I didn’t do surgery (right away). I did a bunch of rehab things. But it got to the point where it felt like this was going to be necessary.” Swanson had an up-and-down 2024 season, but knowing that he played the entire year while dealing with this injury should make us feel a little better about the 30-year-old bouncing back in 2025.
  • HOU Relief Pitcher #55
    The Athletic’s Sahadev Sharma reported that the Cubs have evaluated adding RHPs Ryan Pressly, Kenley Jansen, David Robertson, and Ryne Stanek to their bullpen this offseason.
    Sharma noted that “the list of relievers the Cubs have seriously evaluated easily reaches double digits,” but those are the more high-profile pitchers who the Cubs are considering. Jansen and Robertson are both free agents with closing experience, but they are also in their late 30s. Stanek is a free agent but has been more of a setup guy for his career. Pressly is entering the final year of his contract with the Houston Astros, which includes a no-trade clause and a $14 million salary. The Astros have been looking to trade Pressly since they have Josh Hader entrenched as their closer, but it remains to be seen if any team will give up the prospects necessary to acquire Pressly or if the Astros will pay down any of his salary.
  • FA First Baseman #20
    According to TSN Sports’ Scott Mitchell, Pete Alonso “is still in play” for the Blue Jays even after signing Anthony Santander.
    The Blue Jays are still looking to make a few big additions to their roster after missing out on Juan Soto, Corbin Burnes, and Roki Sasaki. Anthony Santander added a big bat in the middle of the order, but Santander can play the corner outfield, so Pete Alonso could still slide in as the primary designated hitter if he were to join the Blue Jays. Alonso has been a premiere power hitter while playing his whole career in Citi Field, and the Rogers Centre profiles slightly better for right-handed power, so he would still push for 40 home runs while hitting in a lineup that would be significantly deeper than it was a week ago.
  • LAD Relief Pitcher #57
    USA Today’s Bob Nightengale reported that the Dodgers are looking to trade RHP Ryan Brasier and other “surplus” players.
    Nightengale noted that the Dodgers need to clear spots on their 40-man roster for new additions LHP Tanner Scott, RHP Roki Sasaki, and potentially more players that the Dodgers want to add. To do that, they need to trade away some current players, and Brasier with a $4.5 million salary makes some sense. The 37-year-old was solid for the Dodgers last season, posting a 3.54 ERA, 0.96 WHIP, and 25/5 K/BB ratio in 28 innings of middle relief. There is a chance a team will be interested in acquiring him because he has previous experience working in the late innings as well.
  • SEA Outfielder #51
    Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner have been elected to the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame.
    Ichiro becomes the first Japanese-born player headed to Cooperstown and fell just one ballot shy of being a unanimous selection with 99.7 percent of the vote. The Mariners icon wrapped up a legendary 19-year career with 3,089 hits, which doesn’t include his additional 1,278 hits overseas in Japan prior to his stateside arrival. The 2001 AL MVP Award winner broke George Sisler’s single-season record with a staggering 262 hits during a transcendent 2004 campaign and made 10 consecutive All-Star Game appearances from 2001-2010. A six-time All-Star and 2007 AL Cy Young Award winner, Sabathia split his 19-year career between the Guardians and Yankees, with a memorable half-season stint for the Brewers sandwiched in the middle back in 2008 when he tossed an astounding seven complete games during a 17-start span. The generational southpaw, who finished with 251 wins in addition to a lifetime 3.74 ERA across 560 career starts, appeared on 86.8 percent of ballots to easily clear the 75 percent threshold. Among the elite closers of his generation and a strikeout machine, Wagner finally gets the long-awaited call for enshrinement — appearing on 82.5 percent of ballots — during his 10th and final year of eligibility after falling just short (73.8 percent) last year. The trio will join the late Dick Allen and Dave Parker, who were selected for enshrinement back in December by the Classic Baseball Era Committee, this summer in Cooperstown.
  • SEA Relief Pitcher #64
    Mariners acquired RHP Will Klein from the Athletics for international bonus pool money.
    Klein heads to the Pacific Northwest after being designated for assignment last week by the rebuilding Athletics. The 25-year-old righty made eight appearances last year for Oakland, finishing with a bloated 11.05 ERA, 2.45 WHIP and 7/6 K/BB ratio over 7 1/3 innings of work.