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MLB Player News

Rotoworld

  • FA Starting Pitcher #35
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    Adrian Houser elected free agency.
    Houser was signed to a minor league contract in September and didn’t pitch for Baltimore. The 31-year-old struggled to the tune of a 5.84 ERA in the majors before being release by the Mets, and is assuredly looking at another non-guaranteed pact before the start of 2025.
  • FA Relief Pitcher #41
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    The Yankees are among eight teams showing interest in Tommy Kahnle, according to the New York Post’s Jon Heyman.
    Kahnle, 35, hasn’t put in a full season since 2019, but he has been very effective when available the last two seasons, amassing a 2.38 ERA for the Yankees. A reunion with the Bombers makes plenty of sense.
  • FA Relief Pitcher #45
    The Red Sox are signing Aroldis Chapman to a one-year, $10.75 million contract, according to ESPN’s Jeff Passan.
    Chapman gets $250,000 more than he did from the Pirates last year, even though he was rather mediocre in finishing with a 3.79 ERA. He remained one of baseball’s hardest throwers at age 36, and he still managed an elite 37% strikeout rate last season. However, he doesn’t make it easy when he’s walking two batters every three innings. The Red Sox will likely put him in a setup role, but he could always be a candidate for saves if the need arises.
  • FA Relief Pitcher #45
    The Red Sox and Aroldis Chapman are working towards an agreement, according to MassLive’s Chris Cotillo.
    Chapman remains a reasonably effective reliever, and the Red Sox have need of those. It doesn’t make it easy to understand why he’s a priority for this front office when there are plenty of other options out there, but apparently, character is taking a backseat right now.
  • TEX Catcher #20
    Rangers signed C Kyle Higashioka to a two-year, $13.5 million contract with a $7 million mutual option for 2027.
    The deal is now official. Higashioka is coming off the finest offensive campaign of his career last season when he launched 17 round-trippers in 263 plate appearances for the Padres. The 34-year-old veteran backstop provides the Rangers with an excellent complement for starter Jonah Heim, who has started at least 127 games in each of the past three seasons. It’s a nice landing spot in a hitter-friendly ballpark, but he’s unlikely to play enough to make an impact for fantasy purposes outside of extremely deep two-catcher formats.
  • NYM Shortstop #2
    Mets INF prospect Luisangel Acuña is batting .375 (21-for-56) with one homer and 12 steals in 19 contests in Venezuelan Winter League action.
    Acuña made an unexpectedly strong impression during last season’s brief cameo with the Mets, slashing .308/.325/.641 with three homers in 14 contests after posting a pedestrian .654 OPS with seven homers and 40 steals in 131 games for Triple-A Syracuse. The 22-year-old’s prospect stock has tumbled over the last few years, but there’s enough speed here that he could wind up mattering for fantasy purposes in deeper mixed leagues, if he’s getting regular at-bats for New York. That is going to be a challenge with Francisco Lindor at shortstop indefinitely, but the Mets could get creative next season to give him opportunities to make an impact.
  • FA Catcher #20
    Evan Grant of The Dallas Morning News reports the Rangers and Kyle Higashioka have reached a contract agreement.
    No word yet on the financial terms or length of the deal. The update comes shortly after MLB Network’s Jon Morosi reported the two sides were making progress towards an agreement. Higashioka provides the Rangers with a capable complement for Jonah Heim, who has started at least 127 contests in each of the last three seasons. The 34-year-old backstop slugged a career-high 17 round-trippers in 263 plate appearances last year for the Padres. He’s a non-factor for fantasy purposes outside of extremely deep two-catcher formats.
  • FA Relief Pitcher #35
    The New York Post’s Joel Sherman reports the Mets are among teams interested in Clay Holmes as a starting pitcher.
    Holmes, who served as the Yankees’ closer for much of last season before ceding the role to Luke Weaver, has pitched exclusively in relief since 2018. Sherman adds that teams are willing to explore the possibility of moving him back to a starting role after Seth Lugo, Michael King and Reynaldo López successfully made the transition over the last few years. It’s an interesting offseason wrinkle, and Holmes would make a ton of sense for the Mets since they succeeded with a couple cost-effective reclamation projects last offseason in Luis Severino and Sean Manaea. They also just rolled the dice on Frankie Montas as a similar gamble heading into 2025.
  • HOU Center Fielder #76
    Astros general manager Dana Brown told reporters last month that top prospect Jacob Melton has a chance to contribute next season.
    “Melton’s another guy that could be a big piece for us,” Brown said during last month’s annual GM meetings. “He’s a really good defensive outfielder with power. He has a chance to make an impact.” The 24-year-old outfielder will presumably compete next spring with established veterans Chas McCormick and Jake Meyers to carve out a permanent role in Houston’s outfield mix, but he’s on the verge of reaching the big leagues after batting .253/.310/.426 with 15 homers and 30 steals in 443 plate appearances last year between Double-A Corpus Christi and Triple-A Sugar Land. Melton checked in at OF70 in Rotoworld’s 2025 Top 500 dynasty rankings and his power/speed combination makes him an easy top 100 fantasy prospect heading into next year. He’s a name to keep on watch lists, even in re-draft formats entering spring training.
  • INT Starting Pitcher #95
    Mike Mayer of Metsmerized reports Kyle Hart has generated interest from more than a dozen teams this offseason.
    Hart is aiming to return to the big leagues next season after a dominant run last season overseas in Korea where he finished with a stellar 2.69 ERA, 1.03 WHIP and 182/38 K/BB ratio across 157 innings (26 starts). The 32-year-old journeyman southpaw, who made four appearances (three starts) for the Red Sox during the pandemic-shortened 2020 campaign said earlier this month in an interview with Chris Cotillo of MassLive.com last month that re-working his slider, in addition to increasing his average velocity on the offering into the 91 mph range, were the biggest variables that fueled his success overseas. Given the current state of the pitching market, Hart figures to secure a multi-year deal and should get a real chance to prove that his success in Korea wasn’t a mirage.
  • FA Center Fielder #12
    Appearing on MLB Network on Monday, Kevin Pillar said he is no longer interested in retiring.
    The 35-year-old outfielder said “I’ve just had some time to reflect...I still enjoy doing it. I’m pretty sure I still want to play.” He’s going to be in Dallas for the Winter Meetings next week in the hopes of jumpstarting his comeback. Pillar had moments of fantasy usefulness for the Angels this past season but finished the year slashing .229/.291/.377 with eight home runs and 12 steals in 314 plate appearances. He also graded out as a below-average outfielder by Outs Above Average for the first time since 2021 and only the third time in his career. He might need to accept a minor league deal to play in 2025.