Trade season is starting to heat up in fantasy baseball.
Injuries are piling up, contenders are looking for reinforcements, and teams drifting down the standings are beginning to think about the future. That combination creates one of the best trading environments of the season.
The key is getting ahead of the market.
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4 Fantasy Baseball Trade Targets to Act On Before the Market Moves
Rather than waiting for a player to break out or collapse completely, successful fantasy managers often identify trends before they’re reflected in player value. In a recent FantasyPros discussion, Joey P and The Welsh highlighted four players whose trade value may not accurately reflect their current outlook.
Two were identified as buy-low opportunities. Two were viewed as potential sell-high candidates before regression hits.
Here’s a closer look at all four.
Bo Bichette (SS – NYM)
Few players have frustrated fantasy managers more than Bo Bichette this season.
The batting average has been well below expectations, and for a player known for his contact skills, the overall production simply hasn’t matched what fantasy managers anticipated when they drafted him.
The reason Joey P is buying now comes down to recent signs of life.
Over the first two weeks of June, Bichette started driving the baseball again. The discussion highlighted not only the batting average improvement but also the return of extra-base hits. Home runs, doubles, and a triple have all started to appear during his recent hot streak.
The belief is that this isn’t random.
Joey pointed to Bichette’s contract situation as a possible motivating factor, suggesting a player with significant financial incentive to finish strong could be finding his rhythm at the right time.
There’s also a fantasy angle beyond the bat. Bichette’s positional flexibility makes him a potential solution for managers dealing with injuries on the infield.
The market may still be pricing him based on the disappointing first two months rather than what he’s showing now.
Why He’s a Buy
- Production has improved significantly in June.
- Extra-base power is returning.
- Fantasy managers may still be focused on season-long numbers instead of recent performance.
- Positional flexibility adds value.
Mookie Betts (SS/OF – LAD)
Unlike Bichette, Mookie Betts hasn’t fully started turning things around yet.
That’s exactly why The Welsh wants to buy.
The surface numbers look ugly. A batting average hovering around .200 has frustrated fantasy managers all season. However, the underlying profile tells a completely different story.
The discussion focused heavily on Betts’ expected statistics and quality-of-contact metrics. According to The Welsh, nearly every indicator that has historically made Betts successful remains intact.
He’s not chasing pitches. He’s not striking out excessively. He’s pulling the baseball, getting it in the air, and continuing to barrel it at a strong rate.
The biggest culprit appears to be bad luck on balls in play.
A dramatically depressed BABIP has prevented the results from matching the process.
For fantasy managers willing to trust the underlying profile rather than the current stat line, Betts presents one of the more attractive buy-low opportunities available.
Why He’s a Buy
- Expected batting average significantly exceeds actual production.
- Plate discipline remains elite.
- Barrel rates and quality of contact remain strong.
- BABIP suggests significant positive regression could be coming.
Emerson Hancock (SP – SEA)
Not every breakout is built to last.
That’s the concern with Emerson Hancock.
At first glance, the numbers look impressive. A low ERA, strong WHIP, and solid strikeout-to-walk ratio have made him one of the bigger surprises of the season.
Joey P believes fantasy managers should consider cashing out.
The biggest warning sign is the gap between Hancock’s actual ERA and his expected ERA. The discussion repeatedly emphasized that the underlying metrics paint a much less encouraging picture than the current results.
In addition, many of Hancock’s Statcast indicators sit closer to league average than fantasy managers may realize.
None of this guarantees a collapse.
But when a pitcher is dramatically outperforming his expected numbers, fantasy managers should at least explore what the market is willing to pay.
Why He’s a Sell
- Significant gap between actual ERA and expected ERA.
- Underlying metrics don’t fully support current production.
- Career track record doesn’t align with current results.
- Value may never be higher than it is today.
Jose Soriano (SP – LAA)
Jose Soriano may be the toughest player on this list to evaluate.
The surface numbers still look strong. The ERA remains impressive and the win total catches attention.
The concern is that cracks are beginning to show.
The Welsh pointed to several warning signs, including rising walk totals, declining command, and a growing gap between his ERA and expected ERA.
Walks are the biggest issue.
Multiple recent outings featured elevated walk totals, creating additional pressure on Soriano’s ability to continue suppressing runs. At the same time, hitters are doing more damage when they make contact, as reflected in increased barrel rates and launch angles.
The result is a profile that feels increasingly fragile.
The Welsh made it clear that he still views Soriano as a useful fantasy pitcher. The concern isn’t that he’ll become unusable. It’s that fantasy managers may still be valuing him as a top-tier starter when the underlying indicators suggest something closer to a mid-rotation option.
Why He’s a Sell
- Walk rate continues trending in the wrong direction.
- Expected ERA significantly exceeds actual ERA.
- Contact quality against him has worsened.
- Current market value may still reflect early-season success.
Timing Matters in Fantasy Trades
One of the strongest themes from the discussion was timing.
The best trades don’t happen after everyone agrees on a player’s value. They happen when perception and reality haven’t caught up to each other yet.
That’s what makes Bichette and Betts intriguing buy candidates. Their current numbers may be suppressing their trade cost.
It’s also what makes Hancock and Soriano interesting sell candidates. Their current production may be masking warning signs that become more obvious later in the season.
The managers who recognize those gaps first often end up winning the trade.
Fantasy Baseball Takeaways
- Bo Bichette (SS – NYM) is showing signs of life and could be a strong buy-low target before a larger rebound occurs.
- Mookie Betts (SS/OF – LAD) remains one of the most compelling buy-low candidates because his underlying profile still looks elite.
- Emerson Hancock (SP – SEA) has outperformed his underlying metrics and may be a prime sell-high opportunity.
- Jose Soriano (SP – LAA) still has fantasy value, but growing command issues create concern moving forward.
- Betts generated the strongest buy-low argument based on expected statistics and quality-of-contact indicators.
- Hancock and Soriano both carry meaningful regression risk according to the discussion.
- Managers looking to make a move before trade markets become crowded should focus on players whose perception differs from their underlying profile.
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