Fantasy Baseball Player Notes
2026 Fantasy Baseball Draft Notes
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25.
Jackson Chourio
LF,CF,RF
Jackson Chourio delivered a sophomore campaign that closely mirrored his rookie output. He again finished with 21 home runs, pairing them with 21 stolen bases after posting a 21/22 line the year before. His run and RBI totals barely budged as well, crossing the plate 88 times with 78 RBIs after scoring 80 runs and driving in 79 as a rookie. Even his rate stats stayed remarkably steady, as he slashed .270/.308/.463 in 2025 following a .275/.327/.464 line in 2024. Chourio did appear in 17 fewer games this past season, which makes the underlying production more intriguing. When scaled to a full workload, a 25/25 season is well within reach. Assuming roughly 140 games in 2026, fantasy managers should expect similar overall numbers, with a reliable 20/20 floor and a batting average in the .270 range. That profile makes Chourio a strong five-category contributor, even if he hasn't yet blossomed into the elite fantasy force some anticipated.
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52.
Brice Turang
2B
Fantasy managers who drafted Brice Turang, hoping for a repeat of his 50-SB season in 2024, may have been disappointed in the drop to 24, but they got a whole lot more than expected everywhere else. Turang improved in almost every metric, jumping to 18 home runs thanks to a leap in HardHit rate from 29.7% to 47.4%. He batted .288, ranking second at the position, and the 24 steals were still fifth on the list. At only age 26, Turang should bat behind Jackson Chourio and in front of William Contreras and Christian Yelich, an excellent spot to pick up counting stats. At the weakest position in fantasy, Turang may be the only one to offer something in all five categories and is the last of the three in the top tier.
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61.
William Contreras
C
William Contreras took a small step back in 2025, with his OPS dipping to .754 as his ISO fell to .140 despite continued growth in plate discipline (career-best 12.7% BB rate, sub-19% K rate). His contact quality stayed well above league average (91.1 mph EV, 48.6% hard-hit. The 2026 projections point to a rebound toward his established .360+ OBP profile with mid-20s homer upside, supported by premium volume at a scarce catcher position. Given his durability, lineup role, and stable skills, Contreras profiles as a high-floor catcher with bounce-back upside and remains one of the safest investments at the position.
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96.
Christian Yelich
LF
Christian Yelich rebounded to strong everyday value in 2025, launching 29 homers with 16 steals while posting a .795 OPS across 150 games. His strikeout rate jumped to 25.9, while his hard-hit rate dipped to 46.6%, suggesting the power surge may not fully hold. The 2026 projections reflect that regression, forecasting roughly 19 HR, 16 SB, and a .256 average with a mid-.750s OPS. Yelich still provides useful category balance thanks to his on-base skills and speed, but he only played 19 games in the OF and may only qualify as a DH in some formats.
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110.
Jacob Misiorowski
SP
Jacob Misiorowski's 2025 debut showcased frontline bat-missing ability, as he posted a 31.9% strikeout rate and 11.9 K/9 across 66 innings, while holding hitters to a .213 average and .671 OPS. Looking ahead to 2026, projections point to a workload jump and continued strikeout upside, but fantasy managers should expect ratio swings tied to command consistency. He profiles as a high-ceiling SP3/SP4 in standard leagues who can anchor strikeouts but may require roster insulation in WHIP.
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117.
Brandon Woodruff
SP
Brandon Woodruff returned to the mound in 2025 and was highly effective on a per-inning basis, posting a 3.20 ERA, 0.91 WHIP, and an elite 32.3% strikeout rate across 64.2 innings. The sample size again tells the story: he has been oft injured in recent seasons, logging just 12 starts in 2025 after making only 11 in 2023. The 2026 projections reflect that duality: strong ratios and a healthy strikeout total on a per-start basis, but fantasy managers have to temper their expectations on his durability. Fantasy managers should bake in missed time and pair him with safer innings volume rather than relying on him as a staff anchor.
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197.
Trevor Megill
RP
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211.
Abner Uribe
RP
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224.
Andrew Vaughn
1B
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229.
Sal Frelick
LF,CF,RF
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301.
Logan Henderson
SP
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323.
Chad Patrick
SP
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327.
Quinn Priester
SP,RP
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353.
Kyle Harrison
SP,RP
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406.
Luis Rengifo
2B,3B,OF
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407.
Joey Ortiz
SS
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409.
Brandon Sproat
SP
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455.
Garrett Mitchell
CF,RF
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535.
Jared Koenig
RP
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538.
Jett Williams
2B,SS,OF
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575.
Aaron Ashby
RP
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591.
Robert Gasser
SP
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604.
Angel Zerpa
RP
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655.
Jake Bauers
1B,LF,RF
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697.
David Hamilton
2B,SS
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704.
Brandon Lockridge
LF,CF,RF
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726.
Gary Sanchez
C
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747.
Rob Zastryzny
RP
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763.
Grant Anderson
RP
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767.
DL Hall
SP,RP
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784.
Jesus Made
2B,3B,SS
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800.
Craig Yoho
RP
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838.
Shane Drohan
SP
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841.
Jeferson Quero
C
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858.
Coleman Crow
SP
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881.
Andrew Fischer
3B
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894.
Luis Matos
LF,CF,RF
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914.
Tyler Black
1B
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932.
Easton McGee
RP
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1019.
Carlos Rodriguez
RP
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1151.
Tate Kuehner
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1220.
Jake Woodford
RP
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1402.
Blake Perkins
LF,CF,RF
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1404.
Garrett Stallings
RP
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1511.
Akil Baddoo
LF
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1521.
Brock Wilken
3B
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1599.
Ethan Murray
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