Fantasy Baseball Player Notes
2026 Fantasy Baseball Draft Notes
|
1.
Shohei Ohtani
SP,DH - LAD
There's no real debate at the top of 2026 fantasy drafts: In formats where he is considered one player, Shohei Ohtani remains the clear-cut 1.01 thanks to his unmatched two-way impact. Offensively, his 2026 projections again place him among the game's elite, with 45-plus home runs, triple-digit runs and RBI, and an on-base percentage north of .390 while continuing to anchor the Dodgers' lineup from the leadoff spot. The stolen base ceiling isn't what it was earlier in his career, but projected totals in the high teens still provide a valuable bonus atop his league-leading power and run production.
What truly separates Ohtani, however, is his return as a full-time starting pitcher. His 2026 projections peg him as a top-tier arm, capable of delivering ace-level strikeout totals, strong ratios, and double-digit wins in one of baseball's best team contexts. Even with some workload management baked in, Ohtani's ability to provide elite value on both sides of the ball gives fantasy managers a structural advantage no other player can match. As long as he's healthy, Ohtani isn't just the safest pick in fantasy baseball; he's still redefining what roster construction can look like. |
|
2.
Aaron Judge
LF,CF,RF,DH - NYY
Aaron Judge followed up his MVP-caliber 2025 with another elite power profile, delivering 53 HR, 1.144 OPS, and a career-best 12 SB. His 2026 projections still anticipate slight regression & around 43 HR and a .285 AVG, but the underlying rates (elite barrel%, top-tier OBP stability) remain intact. Even with natural aging curves factored in, Judge projects as one of the safest four-category anchors in fantasy. He remains a first-round bat with minimal risk thanks to bankable power and sustainable plate discipline.
|
|
3.
Bobby Witt Jr.
SS - KC
Bobby Witt Jr. solidified his status as a top-tier fantasy player, finishing 2025 with 31 HR, 49 SB, and a .298 average while cutting his chase rate for the second straight season. Projections for 2026 keep him squarely in the elite tier with 30+ HR, 40+ SB, and strong run production. The continued gains in swing decisions and contact quality suggest his breakout is fully sustainable. Witt is a top-three overall fantasy pick with league-winning category balance.
|
|
4.
Juan Soto
LF,RF - NYM
Juan Soto's first season with the Mets produced 43 HR, 37 SB, and a .396 OBP, marking his highest fantasy ceiling since 2021. His 2026 projections dial back the steals (a common trait across projection systems) but still expect mid-30s HR, with a slight batting-average uptick. The plate discipline remains near flawless, and his run-production environment should stay strong. Soto enters 2026 as a high-floor, high-ceiling first-round hitter whose across-the-board contributions make him one of the safest early picks.
|
|
5.
Ronald Acuna Jr.
RF - ATL
Ronald Acuna Jr.'s 2025 was uneven as he worked his way back from knee surgery, flashing his MVP-level ceiling early before fading in the second half. Looking ahead to 2026, fantasy projections still view him as a first-round caliber talent, forecasting roughly 135-145 games with elite across-the-board production in the neighborhood of 30 homers, 90 runs, 90 RBI, and 20-plus steals. Durability remains the clear risk. He has topped 150 games only twice outside of the shortened 2020 season, but the per-game impact is still unmatched when he's on the field. If Acuna slips even slightly in drafts due to health concerns, he's a strong pick under the "anyone can get hurt" philosophy. However, managers who prefer safer volume can justify pivoting to another elite bat.
|
|
6.
Jose Ramirez
3B,DH - CLE
Jose Ramírez remained one of fantasy's most reliable five-category contributors in 2025, once again clearing 30 HR while adding strong run production and double-digit steals. His 2026 projections show only mild age-related regression, with power and speed both expected to remain intact thanks to elite contact quality and plate discipline. Ramírez continues to profile as a safe first-round cornerstone and chronically underrated.
|
|
7.
Tarik Skubal
SP - DET
Tarik Skubal dominated in 2025, posting ace-level ratios while maintaining elite strikeout and walk rates across a full workload (195 IP). His 2026 projections remain optimistic, forecasting another sub-3 ERA with a strong WHIP and strikeout volume. The sustainability is supported by stable velocity, plus command, and one of the league's best swinging-strike profiles. Skubal enters 2026 as a true fantasy ace and a reliable anchor for managers prioritizing pitching early.
|
|
8.
Julio Rodriguez
CF - SEA
Julio Rodriguez posted a strong but slightly underwhelming 2025 relative to his sky-high expectations, as his power output plateaued despite excellent durability and counting stats. The 2026 projections forecast a modest power rebound into the low-30s with continued double-digit steals. His underlying contact metrics remain strong, but launch-angle inconsistency has capped his home-run ceiling year over year. Rodríguez remains a foundational fantasy outfielder, though he now projects closer to the back half of the first round than the very top.
|
|
9.
Elly De La Cruz
SS - CIN
Elly De La Cruz's 2025 season failed to showcase his elite fantasy ceiling. Fantasy managers expecting him to shore up the stolen base category were disappointed to see them drop from 67 to 37. However, after the season, the Reds revealed ELDC had played through a left quad strain for the entire second half, which is certainly supported by his first-half/second-half splits. Swing-and-miss remains part of his profile, though he did get his strikeout rate below 30% for the first time. His 2026 projections expect his stats to move back toward his 2024 numbers, though counting on him for 50+ steals isn't the best approach. Elly remains one of the riskier first-round picks, but could turn into a Top 3 overall if he is able to put it all together.
|
|
10.
Paul Skenes
SP - PIT
Paul Skenes lived up to the hype in 2025, overpowering hitters with elite velocity and swing-and-miss stuff while maintaining strong run prevention in his first extended MLB action. Sure, his record was 10-10, and he probably could have been a 20-game winner on almost any other team. His 2026 projections remain aggressive on strikeouts and ratios, and he is expected to pitch almost 200 innings after throwing 187 in 2025. The year-over-year takeaway is how quickly his command stabilized, limiting walks more than expected for a power arm. Skenes profiles as a high-impact fantasy SP1 whose value is driven by dominance rather than volume alone.
|
|
11.
Kyle Tucker
RF,DH - LAD
Kyle Tucker delivered another well-rounded fantasy season in 2025, pairing plus power with double-digit steals and elite run production. He also delivered another season of murky injuries that diminished his output. His 2026 projections remain remarkably stable, reflecting how consistent his plate discipline and contact quality have been year over year. While there's little growth left in the profile, there's also minimal downside other than the injury history. Tucker signed with the Dodgers, a landing spot that only helps his value, as his profile is that of a safe early-round outfielder who fits seamlessly into any roster build.
|
|
12.
Fernando Tatis Jr.
RF - SD
After two uneven seasons, Fernando Tatis Jr. re-established himself as an elite five-category force in 2025 and projects to remain there in 2026. Projections call for another 30-plus homer, 25-steal campaign with triple-digit runs atop the Padres lineup, supported by strong on-base skills and premium batted-ball quality. His improved plate discipline and reduced strikeout rate from last season point to a more stable batting-average floor than in earlier seasons. At the same time, underlying metrics suggest his power output still has room to grow. Entering his age-27 season with his role and health stabilized, Tatis profiles as a legitimate Top-5 overall fantasy upside play in 2026 drafts.
|
|
13.
Gunnar Henderson
SS - BAL
Gunnar Henderson backed up his 2024 breakout with a season during which he says he had a shoulder impingement for almost 75% of the year. His power dipped considerably, and even though he still stole 30 bags, it was obvious something was off. His 2026 projections expect a bounce-back year, projecting elite power production and strong run totals. Year-over-year gains in swing decisions suggest his profile is fully established rather than volatile. Shortstop is a stacked position, but Henderson remains one of the elite options for those looking to secure it early.
|
|
14.
Garrett Crochet
SP - BOS
Garrett Crochet built on his breakout 2025 by sustaining elite strikeout rates and improved efficiency, alleviating many durability concerns that followed him earlier in his career. His 2026 projections continue to reflect frontline stuff, with strong K totals and solid ratios over a full starter's workload. Crochet is a premium fantasy arm whose upside justifies an aggressive draft slot and should easily be one of the first three pitchers off the board.
|
|
15.
Corbin Carroll
CF,RF - ARI
Corbin Carroll made a noticeable jump in power in 2025, setting career bests with 31 home runs, 84 RBI, a .541 slugging percentage, and a 14.5% barrel rate. The added thump came with a higher strikeout rate (23.8%), but the tradeoff paid off as he still delivered elite all-around production, scoring 107 runs and swiping 32 bases. After an injury-marred 2024, his batting average bounced back from .231 to .259. Heading into his age-25 season, Carroll had been projected to come within striking distance of a rare 30 HR / 100 RBI / 100 R / 30 SB campaign, but a Spring Training injury to his hamate bone could impact his power output, moving him down in drafts and making him riskier than he was before.
|
|
16.
Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
1B,DH - TOR
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. rebounded nicely in 2025, hitting .292 with 23 HR, and his 2026 projections expect his power to climb back over 30 HR. His contact quality improved year over year, with more line-drive contact and a stabilizing strikeout rate. The projected power bounce is supported by underlying metrics, suggesting 2025 may have been closer to his floor than his median outcome. Vladdy profiles as a strong early-round value with legitimate top-five 1B upside if the HR surge materializes.
|
|
17.
Junior Caminero
3B - TB
Junior Caminero's first full MLB season in 2025 delivered flashes of elite raw power but came with expected growing pains in plate discipline. He hit 45 home runs, drove in 110, and scored 93 times. His barrel rate was a fantastic 14% with a 51.4% hard-hit rate. The power is very real. However, in 2026, the Rays shift out of the minor league park they played in and back to one of the worst hitting parks in the majors. His 2026 projections anticipate a small reduction in home runs because of this park switch; however, they also suggest improvement in his ratios as his approach matures in his age-22 season. The underlying exit velocity and hard-hit gains year over year support the power breakout narrative. Caminero profiles as a high-upside player at a weak position whose fantasy value rises quickly if the strikeout rate continues to normalize.
|
|
18.
Kyle Schwarber
LF,DH - PHI
Kyle Schwarber's 2025 profile remained extreme but effective, delivering elite home-run volume and run production while continuing to drag batting average, though not as much as in the past. He played in all 162 games, hit 56 home runs, drove in an MLB-leading 132, and scored 111 runs. His 2026 projections again place him among the league leaders in homers, with OBP formats propping up his overall value. Year over year, the power output has proven remarkably stable despite contact volatility. Schwarber remains a roster-construction play who fits best on teams built to absorb average risk in exchange for top-tier power.
|
|
19.
Cal Raleigh
C,DH - SEA
Cal Raleigh had the year of his life in 2025, smacking 60 home runs while batting .247, far and away his best batting average ever. He drove in 125 and scored 110 times for a Seattle Mariners team that came very close to the World Series. Catcher is such a thin position that it is tempting to spend an early-round pick on Raleigh to be able to set-and-forget the position. His 2026 projections again place him among the position's home run leaders, with playing time security supporting strong counting stats, but we aren't going to see a repeat of his career year, and that is the current draft cost for the Big Dumper. Do you still want to spend a second-round pick on him if he's "only" getting you 40 homers with a .230 batting average? If so, he's easily the best catcher on the board. If not, wait three or four rounds to pick from the second tier.
|
|
20.
Nick Kurtz
1B - ATH
Nick Kurtz's 2025 rookie season showed the potential that made him a top prospect, highlighted by strong on-base skills but uneven in-game power as he adjusted to MLB pitching. His 2026 projections anticipate a small step forward in home runs, but his .290 batting average is a mirage (xBA of .249). The allure of what he is capable of will drive up his price on draft day, and it is difficult to argue with that dream as the A's continue to play 81 games in Sacramento. The volatility is real, and at age 23, he still has some growing pains to come. Even with all that, though, he'll go in the second round in 12-team leagues, so decide quickly if you want that on your squad.
|
|
21.
Pete Alonso
1B - BAL
Pete Alonso once again supplied premium power in 2025, but continued erosion in batting average and on-base skills limited his category impact. His 2026 projections still forecast upper-tier home-run totals, though with muted run production compared to his peak seasons. The year-over-year trend shows narrowing fantasy utility as his value becomes increasingly HR-dependent. Alonso profiles best as a targeted power injection rather than a lineup anchor.
|
|
22.
Jazz Chisholm Jr.
2B,3B - NYY
Jazz Chisholm's 2025 season was a reminder of both his upside and volatility, as power-speed contributions were once again offset by injury concerns and streaky efficiency. His 2026 projections bake in similar power and speed totals with right around 600 plate appearances. When on the field, his per-game fantasy production remains strong, particularly in steals. Chisholm is best approached as a ceiling play rather than a foundational early-round option, but qualifying at third base does bump him up a few spots on draft boards.
|
|
23.
Trea Turner
SS - PHI
Trea Turner's age-32 season was a clear bounce-back, as he hit .304/.355/.457 with 36 stolen bases and a top-five MVP finish, reaffirming that his elite speed remains fully intact. While the power dipped to 15 homers, his improved on-base skills and renewed aggressiveness on the bases helped offset the decline and restored his five-category profile. Defensive metrics also stabilized after a rough 2023-24 stretch, supporting everyday shortstop volume and lineup security. As long as the speed holds near the top of the league, Turner remains a high-floor fantasy anchor with upside tied to any rebound in home-run output.
|
|
24.
Francisco Lindor
SS - NYM
Francisco Lindor remained Mr. Consistent in 2025, once again delivering strong power-speed production. His 2026 projections show minimal regression, closer to a 25/25 season, supported by premium lineup placement and consistent plate discipline. However, the hamate bone injury in Spring Training threatens his counting stat totals, particularly in the power category. He is still a top-tier shortstop, but comes with more risk now than in previous seasons.
|
|
25.
Jackson Chourio
LF,CF,RF - MIL
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.
|
|
26.
Cristopher Sanchez
SP - PHI
Cristopher Sanchez finished second for the Cy Young Award in 2025, and without a historic season from Paul Skenes, he would have been an easy choice. Sanchez threw 202 innings with a 2.50 ERA, a 1.06 WHIP, and 212 strikeouts. His K-rate jumped to 26.3%, and his walk rate remained microscopic at 5.5%. He also had a 176 ERA+, good for fifth in the majors. If you don't want to pay the massive cost for one of the Big 3 pitchers, Sanchez is about as great of a "consolation prize" as there is in starting pitching in 2026.
|
|
27.
Ketel Marte
2B,DH - ARI
The list of elite second basemen in 2026 fantasy baseball looks to be about three players long, and Ketel Marte is at the top of the list, depending on how you feel about Jazz Chisholm Jr. Marte offers an excellent barrel rate (13.5%) and an elite hard hit rate (47%) at the position, while also providing a boon in batting average (career .281 hitter). The downside is there, however. Marte is on the wrong side of 30, and the number of games he's played in has gone from 150 to 136 to 126 in the last three years. Still, you're not getting 30 home runs from many second basemen, and batting in between Geraldo Perdomo and Corbin Carroll should help his counting stats. Marte's biggest issue is health; if you draft him, prepare for at least one IL stint during the season. Otherwise, he's as good as they come.
|
|
28.
Yoshinobu Yamamoto
SP - LAD
Yoshinobu Yamamoto followed up his MLB debut with a strong 2025, flashing elite command and swing-and-miss ability even as his workload was managed. That, however, went out the window when he threw 37 1/3 postseason innings, bringing his total to 210 in 2025. His 2026 projections show maintained excellent ratios and strikeout efficiency. The biggest knock against Yamamoto is that he pitches for the Dodgers, who have a deep enough staff to go with a six-man rotation or rest elite starters down the stretch (fantasy playoffs) if they wish. In any case, Yamamoto profiles as a high-end fantasy starter whose value is anchored in ratios.
|
|
29.
Yordan Alvarez
LF,DH - HOU
Yordan Alvarez is shaping up as one of the more polarizing draft-day decisions in 2026 fantasy leagues. After an injury-marred 2025 season burned managers who invested a first- or early second-round pick, Alvarez now projects as a rebound bat with elite per-game production when healthy. Projection systems still view him as a middle-of-the-order force capable of strong four-category output, supported by his consistently elite plate skills and long track record of hard contact. The main complication is positional flexibility: Alvarez is expected to qualify only at DH in most formats, effectively locking him into a UTIL role and increasing roster rigidity. That added risk will likely suppress his ADP, but entering his age-29 season, the underlying talent suggests a strong bounce-back is well within reach. If the discount reflects health concerns rather than skill erosion, Alvarez becomes a calculated upside play worth considering at the right price.
|
|
30.
Zach Neto
SS - LAA
If Zach Neto had stayed healthy in 2025, it would have been fascinating to see where his numbers would have ended up. As it was, in 128 games, he hit 26 home runs, scored 82 runs, drove in 62 from the leadoff spot, and stole 26 bases. Neto barrels the ball extremely well (14.0%) and is above average in HardHit rate at 46.6%. His batting average in the .250 range won't ruin your averages, and if the steals keep up, he could be a major player in the busy shortstop landscape of 2026 fantasy baseball. He is currently going in the third round of drafts, but a full season could provide a 30/30, which is valuable at any position.
|
|
31.
Pete Crow-Armstrong
CF - CHC
It's almost guaranteed that Pete Crow-Armstrong will be front and center in every "Potential Bust" or "Was it legit?" debate heading into 2026 drafts. To be clear, the 23-year-old delivered a monster stat line: 35 home runs, 95 RBIs, 91 runs scored and 35 stolen bases — production that firmly lands in OF1/OF2 territory. Had the season ended at the All-Star break, we'd likely be discussing whether he deserved first-round consideration. The problem is what followed. His second half unraveled, highlighted by an August stretch in which he logged 112 plate appearances but managed just one homer and five RBIs — a frustrating downturn for fantasy managers trying to make a playoff push. The most reasonable expectation for 2026 is something between his scorching first half and difficult second half. Projections peg him closer to a 20 HR, 75 RBI, 75 R, 30 SB profile — still a valuable fantasy contributor at the right draft price. The concern is cost. There will be managers willing to draft him as a budding MVP candidate. It's wiser to let someone else pay that premium and pivot to safer value elsewhere.
|
|
32.
Bryce Harper
1B - PHI
Bryce Harper remained an elite middle-of-the-order force in 2025, pairing strong on-base skills with power despite minor durability interruptions. His 2026 projections continue to support top-tier production, with stable home run output and run production driven by an excellent walk rate and hard-contact profile. Fantasy managers should view him as a high-floor early-round anchor whose value is safest in OBP formats but still strong in standard leagues, especially if his health cooperates.
|
|
33.
Manny Machado
3B - SD
There is consistent, and then there is Manny Machado. In his age-32 season, Machado played in 159 games, hitting 27 home runs, scoring 91 times, driving in 95, and had a slash line of .275/.335/.460. (His slash line in 2024 was .275/.325/.472.) His home run total was the lowest since 2014 (ignoring 2020), but he actually barreled the ball (12.9%) and had his highest HardHit rate (51.5%) since 2021. The Padres lineup is aging, but Machado is still projected to bat behind Fernando Tatis Jr. and Jackson Merrill, which should lead to plenty of counting stats. Depending on how you feel about Junior Caminero, Machado is either the second or third-best third baseman in 2026 fantasy baseball and a solid early-round pick.
|
|
34.
James Wood
LF,DH - WSH
James Wood was on a legitimate MVP pace through the first half of the 2025 campaign before a sharp second-half regression cooled the hype. He hit .278 with 24 home runs, 12 steals, 59 runs scored, and 69 RBIs early on, but his production dipped significantly down the stretch. Over the remainder of the season, Wood slashed just .223 with seven homers, 28 runs, 25 RBIs, and three stolen bases while being caught three times.
Despite finishing with strong overall totals, the 22-year-old was a liability for fantasy managers late in the year and carried a hefty 32.1% strikeout rate. Still, durability and elite batted-ball metrics stand out: Wood appeared in 157 games, posted a 16.3% barrel rate, a massive 56.3% hard-hit rate, and an .825 OPS. The talent is undeniable, and the ceiling remains enormous—he's best viewed as an OF2 in drafts, with hopes that 2026 delivers the full breakout. |
|
35.
Hunter Brown
SP - HOU
By the end of 2024, it seemed Hunter Brown had unlocked his potential; in 2025, the door came flying open. The 26-year-old started 31 games, throwing 185 1/3 innings with a 2.43 ERA and 206 strikeouts. He increased his strikeout rate to 28.3% and lowered his walk rate to 7.8% to provide fantasy managers with an excellent WHIP of 1.03. Brown did benefit from some luck with a .262 BABIP, leading to an 82% LOB rate and an xERA of 3.17. Even with these small corrections, fantasy managers should view Brown as a bona fide SP1 heading into the 2026 season.
|
|
36.
Brent Rooker
LF,RF,DH - ATH
Credit the Athletics (and Nick Kurtz) for giving fantasy managers a welcome stretch of "Brent Rooker the outfielder," which added some valuable roster flexibility. While Rooker couldn't quite replicate his breakout 2024 campaign, he still delivered strong power production in 2025. He finished with 30 home runs, 89 RBI, and 92 runs scored, posting a .262/.335/.479 slash line. His strikeout rate dipped to 22.2%, a change that may have slightly capped his power output, and it wouldn't be surprising to see that number drift back toward his career norm around 28%. Even so, Rooker benefits from hitter-friendly conditions in Sacramento and a spot in the heart of a lineup that ranked fourth in MLB with a .431 team slugging percentage. With that context, his counting stats should remain reliable, keeping Rooker firmly on the fantasy radar for 2026.
|
|
37.
Logan Gilbert
SP - SEA
When in doubt, draft Mariners pitchers. Logan Gilbert continued his ace-like ways in 2025, increasing his strikeout rate to 32.3% and striking out 173 in 131 innings. He ended the year with a 3.44 ERA, but his xERA was 3.06, so there is some correction expected in 2026. However, Gilbert's WHIP was a pristine 1.03, and if he can stay healthy enough to get near 30 starts, fantasy managers can write his name in ink as an SP1.
|
|
38.
Matt Olson
1B - ATL
Matt Olson's 2025 results fell short of his peak power standards, but remained consistent in other areas. For the fourth year in a row, the 32-year-old played in all 162 games and flirted with another 30/100/100 season. His 2026 projections still forecast elite home run totals and strong RBI production, supported by consistent barrel rates and everyday cleanup duties in Atlanta. Olson's 2025 batting average (.272) was buoyed by a .333 BABIP, so expect regression to around the .250 mark this year. His power floor is among the safest at the position. Olson profiles as a reliable early-round source of HR and RBI, particularly valuable in formats that de-emphasize average.
|
|
39.
Chris Sale
SP - ATL
Chris Sale was absolutely cruising along in 2025, looking like a Cy Young candidate, before a fractured rib injury put him on the shelf from mid-June until the end of August. In 125 2/3 innings, he had a 2.58 ERA with 165 strikeouts and a 1.07 WHIP. His 32.4% strikeout rate and 5.16 K/BB rate remained elite, even in his age-36 season. It can be hard to trust power pitchers into their late 30s, but his return in August showed no lingering effects of the rib injury or indicated a pitcher on the decline. Sale is worthy of SP1 consideration, and fantasy managers can reasonably expect him to throw around 160+ innings at age 37.
|
|
40.
Bryan Woo
SP - SEA
Bryan Woo successfully made "the leap" in 2025, starting 30 games, throwing 186 2/3 innings with a 2.94 ERA and microscopic 0.93 WHIP. He gave up more home runs than we'd like, but his 5.5 K/BB ratio and 27.1% strikeout rate will definitely help us cope on that front. Woo ranked fifth in MLB in swinging strike rate above average with his fastball at 7.4%, only 0.1% behind Tarik Skubal. Woo is only 26 and well on his way to being the ace of any fantasy baseball staff.
|
|
41.
Wyatt Langford
LF,CF - TEX
Wyatt Langford logged the same number of games in his sophomore campaign with Texas as he did during his rookie season, but his underlying production trended in the right direction. He finished with 22 home runs and 22 stolen bases, both modest step-ups from his 2024 totals. His on-base percentage climbed from .325 to .344, while his slugging percentage improved from .415 to .431. Although his overall counting stats dipped, that decline can largely be traced to a Rangers offense that failed to meet expectations. As he heads into his age-24 season, further growth looks likely, with a realistic path to a 25-HR, 20-SB profile as he continues to establish himself at the big-league level. The breakout feels inevitable; it's just a question of timing.
|
|
42.
Rafael Devers
1B,DH - SF
Rafael Devers forced his way out of Boston early in the year and landed in the less fantasy-friendly environment of San Francisco. His numbers held steady for the most part, producing 35 home runs, 99 runs, and 109 RBI, though his batting average was the lowest since 2018. His Barrel percentage jumped from 13% to 16%, and his HardHit rate leapt to 56.1%, both the highest of his career. Projections have him essentially continuing on with these numbers, and at a thinner 1B than expected, Devers is a sneaky pick currently going in the fifth round.
|
|
43.
Cole Ragans
SP - KC
After a brilliant 2024 season, Cole Ragans dealt with injuries in 2025, including a groin strain and a left rotator cuff strain. He started only 13 games, threw 61 2/3 innings, and finished with an ugly 4.67 ERA. However, his xERA was 2.68, FIP was 2.50, and xFIP was 2.45, so a lot of his struggles resulted from terrible luck (.354 BABIP). His 38.1% strikeout rate is unsustainable, but his career swinging strike rate is 14.2%, meaning he should remain a valuable source of Ks. No one likes hearing "left rotator cuff strain" on a left-handed pitcher, but upon his return late last year, he pitched his best innings of the season. There is some risk involved in the 28-year-old, but he will be a high-reward pick if he stays healthy.
|
|
44.
Logan Webb
SP - SF
Logan Webb just kept on keeping on in 2025. He pitched 207 innings, won 15 games, raised his strikeout rate to 26.2%, and continued to avoid walks, posting a 5.4% walk rate. His ERA of 3.22 was a bit low compared to his expected (3.58), but his FIP (2.60) and xFIP (2.78) remain elite. Webb continued to just be a workman in fantasy baseball, throwing over 200 innings for the third straight year. With a 4.87 K/BB ratio and entering his age-29 season, projections are calling for a slightly reduced strikeout rate, but fantasy managers can do a lot worse than Webb as their SP1.
|
|
45.
Max Fried
SP - NYY
After eight years in Atlanta, Max Fried arrived in New York and did what the Yankees were hoping he would do. In 195 1/3 innings pitched, Fried ended with a 2.86 ERA and 1.10 WHIP while striking out 189 batters, the most in any season of his career. While his xERA was higher at 3.40, his FIP (3.07) and xFIP (3.41) suggest the 32-year-old has plenty left in the tank in 2026. Of his 32 starts, 20 of them qualified as quality, making him more valuable in leagues with that category.
|
|
46.
Mookie Betts
SS - LAD
Whether Father Time came calling or it was just a down year, Mookie Betts was one of the bigger disappointments in 2025. In his age-32 season, he saw a drop in his walk rate and posted the lowest batting average of his career. He also suffered a power outage, hitting 20 home runs across 150 games; by comparison, he hit 19 in 2024 across only 116 games. His HardHit rate plummeted to 35.8%, continuing a three-year decline. However, he still bats in the Dodgers lineup, scoring 95 runs and driving in 82 for the World Champions. He will only qualify at shortstop, a much deeper position than second base, in 2026. He still has plenty of value, but don't draft him based on his name alone. We've seen the best Betts has to offer.
|
|
47.
Jacob deGrom
SP - TEX
From 2021 through 2024, Jacob deGrom threw a total of 196 innings, so you can forgive all fantasy managers everywhere for not foreseeing the 172 2/3 innings that arrived in 2025. The 37-year-old started 30 games for the Rangers, ending the year with a 2.97 ERA and his calling card of a 0.92 WHIP, while striking out 185 batters. His strikeout rate was down to 27.7%, which is still pretty elite, but the lowest it had been since 2016. He also got lucky with an opposing batter BABIP of .230, which suppressed his ERA by about 40 points. His FIP was also the highest of his career at 3.64. Look, projecting Jacob deGrom at this point seems like a fool's errand because it is all about health. If he throws another 160+ innings, he'll probably be worth his fourth-round price tag, but I wouldn't bet on that happening.
|
|
48.
Freddie Freeman
1B - LAD
Freddie Freeman remained a model of consistency in 2025, combining a strong batting average, on-base skills, and run production near the top of the Dodgers lineup. The only concerning stat on his profile was a large jump in strikeout rate to 20.4%, the first time since 2016 that it crossed the 20-percent mark. His 2026 projections show only modest age-related regression. If you draft him, you need to bake in lowered expectations regarding his consistency (147 games played each of the last two years) and fewer counting stats. Freeman remains a solid early-round corner infielder in fantasy, even factoring in that he will turn 37 in September, but he is not the pillar that he once was.
|
|
49.
Roman Anthony
LF,CF,RF - BOS
Roman Anthony wasted little time making an impact in Boston, thriving over a 71-game stretch before an oblique injury sidelined him for the postseason. He delivered on the hype, posting a .292/.396/.463 slash line while serving as the Red Sox's catalyst atop the lineup. Although the sample was limited, his underlying metrics jumped off the page, including a 15.5% barrel rate and a 60.3% HardHit rate. Some regression is likely, but the skill set is undeniable as he heads into his age-22 campaign. His .859 OPS mirrored what he showed in the minors, and a 20-homer, 10-steal season with around 90 runs and strong ratios is well within reach in 2026. If he can stay on the field, he should quickly emerge as the clear frontrunner for AL Rookie of the Year honors.
|
|
50.
Austin Riley
3B - ATL
If you're looking for candidates for Comeback Player of the Year, Austin Riley should probably be on it. Riley's age-28 season was cut short by an abdominal injury that cost him almost one-third of the season, sapped his power, and caused his strikeout rate to jump to 28.6%. It was his second injury-shortened year in a row, but the underlying metrics suggest the bounceback is coming. Riley still had an elite 15.2% barrel rate and 50.2% HardHit rate, and his xSLG was 30 points higher than actual. Assuming he is able to return to the player he was from 2021-2023, expect another 30 home runs and 90 runs/RBIs. He should be the fourth third baseman off the board, and you can get him much later than the other three, making him a borderline early-round sleeper candidate.
|
|
51.
Mason Miller
RP - SD
Mason Miller solidified himself as one of baseball's most dominant relievers in 2025, posting a sub-3.00 ERA with a staggering 44.4% strikeout rate and elite bat-missing ability that ticked up even further after his move to San Diego. His year-over-year gains in K% (41.8% in 2024 to 44.4% in 2025) came with louder contact suppression, as opponents hit just .139 overall with a .493 OPS. Miller is a high-volume saves source with league-best ratios, firmly cementing him as a top-tier fantasy closer and one of the safest bullpen anchors on draft day.
|
|
52.
Brice Turang
2B - MIL
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.
|
|
53.
Edwin Diaz
RP - LAD
Edwin Díaz reaffirmed his elite closer status in 2025, posting a dominant 1.63 ERA with a .502 OPS allowed and strong underlying indicators, including a sub-0.90 WHIP and elite run-prevention metrics. While his strikeout rate (38.0%) was slightly below his 2022 peak, it remained well above league average and was paired with improved home-run suppression and stable command. The 2026 projections reflect continued ninth-inning dominance with high save volume and strong ratios, supported by his consistent bat-missing profile and ability to limit hard contact. As long as health cooperates and the Dodgers don't get too cute with their bullpen, Díaz remains a top-tier fantasy closer with realistic upside to finish among the league leaders in saves again.
|
|
54.
Josh Naylor
1B,DH - SEA
Let's start with the important part: Josh Naylor will not steal 30 bases again in 2026. With a previous high of 10, the 30 was a gift to managers who drafted him and will most likely be the outlier of his career. Naylor did sacrifice power in his time between Arizona and Seattle, hitting only 20 home runs after smacking 31 the year before. The .295 average helped offset this to some degree, but as a career .269 hitter, this is also suspect to continue. Even though he will only be 29 this season, the return to Seattle limits the upside we can expect. He's more of an avoid, unless he falls in drafts.
|
|
55.
George Kirby
SP - SEA
George Kirby's 2025 surface stats regressed (4.21 ERA, 1.19 WHIP) as his pristine control wavered, highlighted by a career-high 5.5% walk rate and elevated hard-hit contact. The encouraging sign was a spike in strikeouts (26.1% K rate, 9.8 K/9), which kept his underlying indicators intact. His FIP was notably lower than his ERA, and his four-year track record of elite command and durability suggests the 2025 dip was more noise than skill erosion. Based on the 2026 projections and his underlying profile, Kirby profiles as a rebound SP2 whose draft cost should reflect last year's disappointment rather than his true talent.
|
|
56.
Freddy Peralta
SP - NYM
Freddy Peralta followed up a solid 2024 with a true breakout in 2025, posting a 2.70 ERA, 1.08 WHIP, and 17 wins over 176.2 innings while finishing top-five in Cy Young voting. His underlying profile supported the leap, as he cut opponents' OPS to .603, limited home runs (2.9 HR%), and maintained an elite strikeout rate (28.2%) with improved run prevention (154 ERA+). The walk rate remains slightly elevated, but his ability to suppress hard contact and miss bats at a high level keeps the ratios stable. Peralta profiles as a dependable fantasy ace worth an earlier pick in drafts.
|
|
57.
Jarren Duran
LF,CF - BOS
After a breakout 2024, Jarren Duran regressed in 2025. His power and speed dipped to 16 home runs and 24 steals after posting 21 long balls and 34 swipes the year prior. While his RBI total climbed from 75 to 84, his run production fell by 25, influenced in part by injuries throughout the lineup and the midseason trade of Rafael Devers. Heading into 2026, Duran projects more in line with his 2025 output. He remains a viable OF3 option, though he could fall outside the top 24 outfielders as he enters his age-29 campaign.
|
|
58.
CJ Abrams
SS - WSH
CJ Abrams' 2025 stats look similar to the two years before. In 635 plate appearances, he hit 19 home runs, stole 31 bases, and slashed .257/.315/.433. He did see a jump in his runs scored (92), presumably because of James Wood hitting behind him. Fantasy managers should be aware that all of his expected numbers were lower than his actuals, and his barrel rate and HardHit rate are nothing to write home about. He will steal 30+ bases, pop around 20 dingers, and the top of the Nationals lineup has worlds of potential. It's just hard to swallow the high price tag in such a deep position.
|
|
59.
Riley Greene
LF,CF,RF,DH - DET
Riley Greene built on his breakout 2024 with another strong campaign in 2025, though it came with some noticeable tradeoffs. Batting mostly in the cleanup spot, he launched 36 home runs and knocked in 111 runs while posting a team-best .806 OPS. That power surge represented a 33% jump in homers, but it was paired with a spike in strikeouts, as his K-rate climbed to 30.7%. At the same time, his walk rate dipped from 11% to 7%, which dragged down his overall slash line more than fantasy managers would have liked. The underlying power metrics remain excellent—Greene posted a 17.1% barrel rate and a 45.5% hard-hit rate—supporting the production. While he falls just short of true OF1 territory, he enters his age-25 season firmly near the top of the OF2 tier.
|
|
60.
Jackson Merrill
CF - SD
Multiple trips to the injured list cut short what could have been a breakout campaign for the 22-year-old, holding Jackson Merrill to 115 games with 16 home runs and just one stolen base. Entering 2026 healthy, he's a strong bet to rebound toward his 2024 production. While he's unlikely to be a major contributor on the bases, a season in the range of 25 homers with around 80 runs and 80 RBI is well within reach. His expected batting average and slugging percentage both outpaced his actual results, pointing to poor fortune layered on top of the injury issues. Merrill still offers the highest ceiling among his peers and could push into OF2 value if everything clicks, though he's best drafted as an OF3 with upside baked in.
|
|
61.
William Contreras
C,DH - MIL
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.
|
|
62.
Maikel Garcia
2B,3B,SS,OF - KC
Maikel Garcia took a massive step forward in 2025, transforming from a speed-first table-setter into a well-rounded fantasy contributor with a .286/.351/.449 line, 16 homers, and 23 steals. The offensive breakout was backed by real skill growth, including a sharp jump in on-base ability and contact quality after a down 2024. His elite defensive versatility locked in everyday playing time, which allowed the counting stats to fully surface across a full season. At just 26 years old, Garcia now profiles as a high-floor, multi-category infielder with sneaky upside rather than a niche speed play.
|
|
63.
Cody Bellinger
LF,CF,RF - NYY
Cody Bellinger silenced doubts during his stint in New York, showing that his resurgence in Chicago was no fluke. He finished the season with 29 home runs, 98 RBIs, 89 runs scored, and 13 stolen bases, while posting a strong .272/.334/.480 slash line. His batted-ball quality also trended in the right direction, as his HardHit rate climbed by five percentage points to 37.9%.
As he enters his age-30 campaign, his return to the Bronx is a boon to his fantasy value. A baseline projection in the range of 25 home runs with roughly 80 runs and 80 RBIs is a fair starting point. While his recent production has been far more stable, the downturns from 2021 and 2022 still loom as a reminder of his volatility. Fantasy managers should value the upside—but avoid paying a premium on draft day. |
|
64.
Jesus Luzardo
SP - PHI
In his first season in Philadelphia, Jesus Luzardo threw 183 2/3 innings, struck out 216 batters, and ended with a 3.92 ERA and 1.22 WHIP. His xERA was 3.34, and his FIP was an impressive 2.90. Lizardo's strikeout rate of 28.5% was in line with his two best seasons in Miami in 2022 and 2023, and even though we don't chase wins, his 15-7 record was a nice addition in fantasy. He cut his HR/9 to 0.78, the lowest of his career as a starter. Heading into his age-28 season, Luzardo profiles as a solid SP2 in fantasy.
|
|
65.
Vinnie Pasquantino
1B,DH - KC
Vinnie Pasquantino showed us the power we'd been hoping for in 2025, hitting 32 home runs and driving in 113. He barrels the ball well (10.8%), and he offers a decent batting average in the .265 range. Batting behind Bobby Witt Jr. and the seemingly ageless Sal Perez will never be a bad thing for counting stats. If you wait until the middle rounds, Pasquantino is in the last of the tier to be a true anchor at first base in 2026.
|
|
66.
Joe Ryan
SP - MIN
Joe Ryan took a clear step forward in 2025, pairing a career-high workload (171 IP) with a 28.2% strikeout rate and his best ERA+ (125), supported by strong underlying indicators like a .218 opponent AVG and elite command (5.7% BB%). His four-seam-heavy profile still carries home run risk, but improved batted-ball suppression and a near-5.0 K/BB ratio helped stabilize his ratios year over year. The 2026 projections continue to view Ryan as a reliable mid-rotation fantasy anchor with above-average strikeouts and solid WHIP, even if he doesn't quite reach ace-level ceilings. At age 30 with a stable role and skills trending positively, Ryan profiles as a dependable SP2 who's safer than his draft cost suggests.
|
|
67.
Dylan Cease
SP - TOR
Dylan Cease signed a seven-year, $210 million contract with the Blue Jays in November, parlaying his steady strikeout rate numbers and artificially inflated ERA in 2025 into security with the 2025 runners-up. In his age-29 season, Cease was snakebit by a .320 BABIP, ballooning his ERA to 4.55 with an xERA of 3.46. The important stat to know is his 29.8% K-rate and five consecutive years of 200+ strikeouts. If you can absorb a bit of a WHIP hit (career 1.26), the counting stats are there for the taking.
|
|
68.
Shea Langeliers
C - ATH
Shea Langeliers took a significant step forward in 2025, posting career-best marks across the board with a .277/.325/.536 slash, 31 homers, and sharp gains in contact quality. His strikeout rate dropped to 19.7% (down from 27.2% in 2024) while maintaining strong power indicators, including a .260 ISO and near-elite hard-hit rate for the position. The improved approach and BABIP rebound (.290) support much of the batting average growth, not just a fluky power spike. With 2026 projections reinforcing him as a 25-30 HR catcher with playable ratios, Langeliers has firmly elevated himself into the upper tier at a thin fantasy position.
|
|
69.
Framber Valdez
SP - DET
After a long offseason of speculation, Framber Valdez signed a three-year, $115 million deal with the Detroit Tigers, immediately making that team the runaway favorites in the AL Central. Valdez struggled a little in 2025, ending with a 3.66 ERA, the highest in his career as a starter. Most of this was due to the wheels coming off in the second half of the season, when he accumulated a 5.20 ERA, and opponents began hitting the ball much harder off him. However, he will reunite with AJ Hinch in Detroit, and he struck out 187 batters in 192 innings. Comerica Park should help keep him in games, and Valdez remains a quality start machine. Not a bad SP2 to have, for Detroit or a fantasy team.
|
|
70.
Andres Munoz
RP - SEA
Andres Muñoz fully cemented himself as an elite fantasy closer in 2025, pairing a 1.73 ERA with 38 saves and maintaining his trademark swing-and-miss profile (32.7% K rate) despite occasional control volatility. Muñoz is a top-tier saves anchor with strong strikeout totals and elite run prevention, even if WHIP remains merely good rather than pristine due to walks. Entering his age-27 season with stable ninth-inning command in Seattle, Muñoz profiles as one of the safest high-end relievers in fantasy drafts.
|
|
71.
Cade Smith
RP - CLE
Cade Smith has quickly emerged as one of baseball's most dominant late-inning arms. His bat-missing ability has remained consistent across both seasons, posting a 35.1% strikeout rate over his first 149 MLB innings with excellent control (6.1% BB%). While his ERA rose to 2.93 in 2025 as his fly-ball rate and HR% ticked up slightly, the underlying profile still supports high-end relief production. The 2026 projections forecast roughly 30 saves, 91 strikeouts, and a 3.05 ERA across 71 innings as Cleveland's primary closer in the top tier of relievers.
|
|
72.
Byron Buxton
CF - MIN
Byron Buxton appeared in 126 games in 2025 — his highest total since logging 140 contests in 2017 — and delivered one of the best seasons of his career. He earned an All-Star selection, picked up MVP consideration and took home a Silver Slugger after posting career highs with 35 home runs, 83 RBI and 97 runs scored. Buxton also swiped 24 bases without being caught and ranked fourth in the American League with a .878 OPS. The underlying metrics back it up, too, as he produced a 53.8% hard-hit rate and a 17.6% barrel rate. Even in a relative best-case scenario, he still missed nearly a quarter of the season due to various injuries. Buxton will be 32 on Opening Day in 2026, and his track record suggests IL stints are more expectation than exception. While any player can get hurt, some carry more baked-in risk than others. If he comes close to repeating his 2025 output, he has league-winning upside — just be careful about drafting him as if that outcome is the baseline.
|
|
73.
Jhoan Duran
RP - PHI
Jhoan Duran rebounded strongly in 2025, posting a 2.06 ERA across 70 innings with elite run suppression indicators, including a career-low 1.0% HR rate and a .564 OPS allowed, signaling a return to dominance after a shaky 2024. While his strikeout rate (27.9%) was down from his 2022-23 peak, improved command and consistently heavy ground-ball rates helped stabilize his ratios and WHIP. He remains a high-end closer with strong save totals and excellent ERA/WHIP support.
|
|
74.
Geraldo Perdomo
SS - ARI
Geraldo Perdomo delivered a true breakout in 2025, erupting for a .290/.389/.462 slash with 20 homers, 27 steals, and 100 RBI while finishing fourth in MVP voting. After previously profiling as an OBP-focused table-setter, he made tangible gains in both power and aggressiveness on the bases, turning him into a legitimate five-category contributor. His elite plate discipline (94 walks vs. 83 strikeouts) gives the profile strong stability, even if some power regression follows. Entering his age-26 season, Perdomo looks like one of fantasy's safest high-end shortstops with upside tied to lineup context and continued run-production growth.
|
|
75.
Corey Seager
SS - TEX
Corey Seager followed up his MVP-caliber 2023-24 run with another elite per-game season in 2025, posting a .271/.373/.487 slash with a 151 OPS+ despite being limited to 102 games. His plate discipline continued to improve, as he set a career high in walk rate while maintaining plus power and run production when healthy. Durability remains the lone concern, but his underlying offensive skills show no signs of erosion entering his age-32 season. If fantasy managers can deal with some missed time, Seager remains one of the safest high-end fantasy bats at shortstop.
|
|
76.
George Springer
LF,CF,RF,DH - TOR
George Springer silenced skeptics in 2025 with his strongest campaign since 2019, turning in a monster season at age 35. He appeared in 140 games, launching 32 home runs while scoring 106 runs, driving in 84, and swiping 18 bases. His .309/.399/.560 slash line was the best of his career, and his 166 wRC+ ranked third across MLB. The obvious question is how to value Springer heading into his age-36 season in 2026. A repeat batting average is unlikely, as his .309 mark was fueled by a .340 BABIP—well above his career norm. Most projections pull his power back into the mid-20s for home runs, but the strength of the lineup around him should help preserve strong run and RBI totals, along with roughly 15 stolen bases. If Springer can once again stay on the field for around 140 games, he remains a valuable fantasy asset. While a full encore of 2025 shouldn't be expected, even modest regression still leaves him among the more reliable contributors.
|
|
77.
Kyle Bradish
SP - BAL
Kyle Bradish's road back from Tommy John surgery was long, but his return in August 2025 showed the potential for building on the breakout foundation he established during his 2023 Cy Young-caliber campaign. The 2026 projections appropriately price in strong ratios and strikeouts but stop short of a full starter's workload, capping his ceiling in volume-driven formats. Bradish profiles as a high-upside fantasy riser whose value spikes in leagues that prioritize ratios and strikeout efficiency over innings.
|
|
78.
Randy Arozarena
LF,CF - SEA
Randy Arozarena delivered one of his strongest fantasy campaigns in 2025, stuffing the stat sheet with 27 home runs, 95 runs scored, 76 RBI, and 31 stolen bases. Both the power and speed marks represented new career highs for the 30-year-old outfielder. While batting average will likely always be a mild drag on his profile, the underlying quality of contact remained excellent, highlighted by a .798 OPS, an 11.5% barrel rate, and a 50.6% hard-hit rate. He also remained a savvy and efficient threat on the bases, getting caught just six times. With a lineup that still offers plenty of run-producing potential, Arozarena profiles as a dependable OF2 option for 2026 fantasy drafts.
|
|
79.
Ben Rice
C,1B,DH - NYY
Ben Rice followed a rough 2024 debut with a legitimate breakout in 2025, slashing .255/.337/.499 with 26 homers and a 131 OPS+ across 138 games. The power spike was supported by improved contact quality and a manageable strikeout rate, turning him from replacement-level depth into a middle-of-the-order threat. Dual eligibility at catcher and first base quietly boosts his fantasy value. While his defensive profile may keep him rotating between DH and multiple positions, Rice's age-26 surge makes him an appealing upside target.
|
|
80.
Bo Bichette
3B,SS - NYM
After spending the first seven years of his career in Toronto, Bo Bichette signed a 3-year, $126 million deal with the Mets. He will presumably bat behind Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto, and he should pick up third base eligibility early in the 2026 season, making him much more attractive for fantasy managers. Bichette had a renaissance 2025 season, batting .311 after a miserable .225 in half a season before. He popped 18 home runs, drove in 94, and scored 78 runs. He continued his impressive HardHit rate at 48.8% and got on base at a .357 clip. While the Blue Jays' lineup was no slouch, batting behind Lindor and Soto should afford Bichette plenty of counting stat opportunities. A 20/80/80 season seems reasonable, but the boost to batting average is what makes him a valuable mid-round pick as your SS1.
|
|
81.
Hunter Goodman
C,DH - COL
Hunter Goodman broke out in 2025, collecting a 31 HR, 91-RBI campaign with a .278/.323/.520 slash and 120 OPS+. His average exit velocity (90.8 mph) and 47.3% hard-hit rate both cleared league norms. The strikeout rate remains elevated (26.3%) and his 5.7% walk rate caps the OBP ceiling, but a .243 ISO with consistent pull-side authority gives him bankable power in Colorado. For 2026, projections have his batting average closer to his career .248 mark, reflecting some BABIP normalization after last year's .331 clip. Qualifying at catcher enhances his value, given the position's shallowness. Goodman profiles as a power bat whose batted-ball quality supports another 25-30 homer season, but managers should price in batting average volatility rather than paying for a repeat of the .278 mark.
|
|
82.
Eury Perez
SP - MIA
Eury Perez's 2025 surface stats (4.25 ERA) mask how dominant his underlying skills remained, as he held hitters to a .195 average with a 27.3% strikeout rate. Entering 2026, projections point to a return toward his frontline-starter upside if his workload can safely ramp up, making him a high-impact fantasy arm on a per-inning basis. Durability and innings volume remain the only things separating Perez from ace-level production, but the skills clearly support a breakout if he's allowed to go deeper into games.
|
|
83.
Tyler Soderstrom
1B,LF - ATH
Fantasy managers who took a chance on Tyler Soderstrom in 2025 were rewarded with a breakout season. At just 23 years old, he delivered 25 home runs, drove in 93 runs, scored 74 times, swiped eight bases, and posted a strong .276/.346/.474 slash line. He made tangible progress cutting down his strikeouts while continuing to impact the ball at an elite level, ranking in the 86th percentile in hard-hit rate (49.8%). Encouragingly, his expected batting average and slugging percentage closely matched his actual production, suggesting the performance was well-earned. With projections calling for a comparable output in 2026 and the Athletics' hitters benefiting from games in Sacramento, Soderstrom enters his age-24 season as a dependable OF3 option.
|
|
84.
Eugenio Suarez
3B,DH - CIN
Eugenio Suarez enjoyed a dramatic power resurgence in 2025, crushing 49 home runs with 118 RBI across 159 games while rebounding from a down 2023 season. Although the batting average remained volatile (.228 overall), his .526 slugging percentage and top-tier barrel production reaffirmed his value as a category-altering power bat. The strikeout rate is still elevated, keeping his floor low in average-based formats, but the run production and durability help offset the risk. The move to Cincinnati boosts his value compared to having re-signed in Seattle, simply from a ballpark perspective. Entering his age-34 season, Suarez profiles as a high-variance corner infielder whose fantasy value hinges on elite power holding steady despite age-related decline concerns.
|
|
85.
Nolan McLean
SP - NYM
Nolan McLean's brief 2025 MLB sample showcased frontline skills beneath the surface. His ability to suppress quality contact (89.5 mph average EV, .571 OPS against) paired with above-average command (8.5% BB%) suggests the performance wasn't fluky, even if some ERA regression is likely as innings scale. The 2026 projections point to a heavier workload with solid strikeout totals. Given the bat-missing profile and batted-ball dominance, McLean profiles as a high-upside fantasy option who can outperform his draft cost if he holds a regular rotation spot.
|
|
86.
Michael Harris II
CF - ATL
Michael Harris took another step back in 2025, slashing .249/.268/.409 with a career-worst 88 OPS+ despite playing 160 games. His plate discipline eroded further, as his walk rate cratered to 2.5% while his .281 BABIP and .295 rOBA both trended well below his rookie peak. The underlying quality of contact also dipped (43.6% HardHit, 89.4 mph EV), and his once-impactful baserunning regressed, leading to a sharp decline in overall offensive value. While the 2026 projections still forecast a return to 20/20 production, Harris is best viewed as a fantasy faller entering his age-25 season unless he meaningfully rebounds in approach and on-base skills.
|
|
87.
Nick Pivetta
SP - SD
Nick Pivetta's 2025 breakout in San Diego was supported by real skill growth, highlighted by elite run prevention, a sub-1.00 WHIP, and career-best contact suppression (.195 BAA, .583 OPS against). His strikeout rate dipped slightly from peak Boston levels, but improved command and a sharp reduction in hard contact and BABIP drove a massive jump in value. Pivetta's projections appropriately pull him back from ace-level ratios, yet still view him as a strong mid-rotation fantasy starter with above-average strikeouts and solid run support. Fantasy managers should treat Pivetta as a high-floor SP3/4 rather than fully buying the Cy Young-adjacent ceiling he flashed in 2025.
|
|
88.
Oneil Cruz
CF - PIT
Oneil Cruz followed up his 2024 breakout (21 HR, 22 SB, .773 OPS, 114 OPS+) with a steep regression in 2025, batting just .200 with an 87 OPS+ despite swiping a career-high 38 bases. His 95.8 mph average exit velocity and 56.9% hard-hit rate were both elite and actually improved year over year, but a .262 BABIP and persistent 32.0% strikeout rate cratered his overall production. Looking ahead, Cruz's 2026 projections suggest a rebound toward his 2024 form, banking on normalization in batting average with continued 20/30 upside. If the BABIP corrects even partially, his rare combination of top-of-scale power and speed makes him a prime fantasy rebound candidate with upside, but managers must build around the batting average risk.
|
|
89.
Nico Hoerner
2B - CHC
Nico Hoerner quietly delivered his best all-around season in 2025, pairing a career-high offensive impact (114 OPS+) with elite contact skills and Gold Glove-caliber defense. His strikeout rate dipped to 7.6% while maintaining above-average run production and efficiency on the bases, reinforcing his high-floor fantasy profile. His strong plate skills and secure everyday role keep him valuable in batting average, runs, and steals. Entering a contract year, Hoerner has added motivation to sustain peak performance, even if his limited power caps category ceiling.
|
|
90.
David Bednar
RP - NYY
|
|
91.
Aroldis Chapman
RP - BOS
|
|
92.
Jeremy Pena
SS - HOU
Jeremy Pena took a major step forward in 2025, posting career highs in batting average (.304), OBP (.363), slugging (.477), and OPS (.840) while cutting his strikeout rate and showing tangible growth in plate discipline. The power rebound (17 HR) combined with a repeatable 20-SB pace pushed him from a glove-first middle infielder into a true five-category contributor. Underlying contact quality and 2026 projections support most of the gains, even if some batting average regression is expected. Pena fractured the tip of his finger in early March, but he should be ready to go for Opening Day.
|
|
93.
Devin Williams
RP - NYM
After years of dominance in Milwaukee, Devin Williams endured a turbulent first season in New York in 2025, posting a 4.79 ERA across 67 appearances despite still striking out 90 batters in 62 innings. The underlying indicators remained far stronger than the surface results (2.68 FIP and 13.1 K/9). FantasyPros' 2026 projections anticipate a rebound, forecasting roughly a 3.26 ERA, 86 strikeouts, and around 30 saves over about 66 innings. Given the massive ERA-FIP gap in 2025 and his sustained strikeout dominance, Williams profiles as a bounce-back fantasy riser if he retains a full-time closing role.
|
|
94.
Teoscar Hernandez
LF,RF - LAD
Teoscar Hernandez took a dramatic step back in 2025 after posting a massive 25.6 offensive WAR the year before, finishing with just 0.4. His production dipped nearly across the board, and injuries limited him to 134 games. All that said, Hernández still managed 25 home runs with 89 RBI, scored 65 runs, and added five steals, but his efficiency cratered. He posted career lows with a .247/.285/.454 slash line, raising concerns about age-related decline as he enters his age-33 season. While hitting in the Dodgers lineup provides an appealing run-producing environment, continued struggles could push him lower than his typical middle-of-the-order role. Power remains his calling card, but at this stage, Hernandez profiles best as a depth outfielder, ideally drafted as an OF3 or OF4 rather than a lineup anchor.
|
|
95.
Kevin Gausman
SP - TOR
Kevin Gausman followed up his 2024 dip with a strong rebound in 2025, logging 193 innings with a 3.59 ERA and an excellent 1.06 WHIP. While his strikeout rate (24.4% K%) remained solid, it was well below his 2022-23 peak, reinforcing the trend that his fantasy ceiling is no longer ace-level. Projections forecast dependable innings, solid ratios, and above-average command, but fewer strikeouts than elite fantasy starters. At age 35, Gausman is best suited as a high-floor SP3/4 rather than a staff anchor, with value tied heavily to workload stability and ratio support rather than upside.
|
|
96.
Christian Yelich
LF,DH - MIL
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.
|
|
97.
Alex Bregman
3B - CHC
Alex Bregman only appeared in 114 games for the Red Sox last season, but he cashed in during free agency with a five-year deal with the Cubs. Aside from 2025 and an injury-plagued 2021 season, Bregman has been steady in games played, and he's been a solid contributor, with a career slash line of .272/.365/.481. He will be 32 this season, so we've probably seen the best of him, but third base is not a particularly deep position. Projections have him with a 20/80/80 season, which is totally fine if you decide to wait until the middle rounds to fill that roster spot. Don't reach for him because of his name, but he fits the bill of "you know what you're gonna get" in 2026 fantasy.
|
|
98.
Michael Busch
1B - CHC
Michael Busch has rapidly developed into one of fantasy's most reliable power bats, following a strong 2024 with a full-blown breakout in 2025 that featured 34 homers, a .523 slugging percentage, and a 147 OPS+. The jump in production wasn't empty volume. His rOBA and run value both spiked, confirming real growth in impact contact rather than a fluky power surge. While the strikeout rate remains elevated, Busch offsets it with solid on-base skills and elite durability, logging 150+ games in back-to-back seasons. At age 28, he's firmly established as a high-end fantasy first baseman whose profile now supports both a strong floor and a stable power ceiling.
|
|
99.
Trevor Story
SS - BOS
Trevor Story's 2025 rebound was quietly impressive, as he logged a full season for the first time since 2021 and delivered 25 HR with a career-best 31 stolen bases. While the batting average (.263) and on-base skills remain below his Colorado peak, the power-speed blend at shortstop is once again intact when volume is present. Entering 2026, Story profiles as a high-variance but legitimate middle-infield upside play, with health, rather than skill erosion, still the defining risk.
|
|
100.
Seiya Suzuki
LF,RF,DH - CHC
Seiya Suzuki delivered a wildly uneven 2025 campaign. He posted new career bests with 32 home runs and 103 RBIs, but the bulk of that damage came early, as 25 of those homers and 77 RBIs were recorded before the All-Star break. Like much of Chicago's lineup, Suzuki cooled off significantly in August, managing just one home run across 89 at-bats. The power surge came at a cost, as his batting average dipped to .245 after finishing above .280 in each of the previous two seasons. Entering his age-31 season and set to hit free agency in 2027, Suzuki could show a bit more urgency at the plate in 2026. Even without a major spike, fantasy managers can reasonably project something in the neighborhood of 25 homers, 75 runs, and 85 RBIs. He remains a steady draft option based on four years of reliable MLB production, with the upside of a potential contract-year push.
|
|
101.
Jose Altuve
2B,LF,DH - HOU
Jose Altuve's 2025 profile showed clear age-related erosion, with declining rOBA, reduced hard-hit rates, and a continued drop in stolen-base efficiency despite strong durability. While his contact skills remain above average, the quality of contact has flattened out, making his mid-20s home run totals harder to bank on going forward. The 2026 projections reflect this shift, leaning toward solid but unspectacular production with diminishing speed and only modest power. Altuve still offers batting average stability and run production in a strong lineup, but at his age, he profiles more as a floor play than a difference-maker in fantasy formats.
|
|
102.
Willy Adames
SS - SF
Willy Adames continued to provide bankable power in 2025 with 30 home runs, but the batting average (.225) and elevated strikeout rate once again capped his overall fantasy ceiling. His underlying profile still supports mid-20s to low-30s homer power in 2026, though projections point toward neutral batting average and reduced steals compared to his 2024 peak. Adames remains a dependable power-first shortstop in fantasy, but he's better valued as a solid floor option than a true breakout bat.
|
|
103.
Tyler Glasnow
SP - LAD
Tyler Glasnow followed up his 2024 All-Star campaign (3.49 ERA, 168 K in 134 IP) with a strong but abbreviated 2025, posting a 3.19 ERA and .177 BAA across 90.1 innings. The swing-and-miss remained intact (29% K rate), but his walk rate spiked to 11.7%, driving a 3.75 FIP and reminding fantasy managers that command volatility still lurks beneath the surface. Projections lean into a rebound in workload with frontline ratios and well north of a strikeout per inning, banking on improved control closer to his 2023-2024 levels. In Los Angeles, team context keeps his win ceiling elevated whenever he's active, but health remains the swing factor after topping 120 innings just twice in his career.
|
|
104.
Salvador Perez
C,1B,DH - KC
Sal Perez remained remarkably durable in 2025 with 155 games played, but the underlying production continued to slide as his batting average fell to .236 and his OBP dipped below .290. While the raw power is still intact, 30 homers and 100 RBI, the overall offensive efficiency has flattened to league-average levels, limiting his advantage over younger catching options. His aggressive approach and declining contact quality leave little margin for error, especially as age-related regression becomes harder to ignore. Perez is still a volume-driven fantasy catcher with counting-stat value, but he now profiles best as a mid-tier option rather than a clear positional edge.
|
|
105.
Yandy Diaz
1B,DH - TB
Yandy Diaz made the most of the Rays' season at George Steinbrenner Field, cracking the 25-HR mark for the first time in his career while maintaining a .300 average. With the return to much less hitter-friendly Tropicana Field, fantasy managers should not expect another 25 homers, but 20 is within reason. Diaz is a middle-round pick best used to boost batting average, but there is more power to be had elsewhere at the position.
|
|
106.
Sonny Gray
SP - BOS
Sonny Gray was one of the only bright spots in the Cardinals' 2025 season. He started 32 games, threw 180 2/3 innings, and struck out 201 batters. His ERA was inflated at 4.28 with an expected of 3.90, but his FIP (3.39) suggests both of these numbers are high, and his xFIP is even lower at 3.06. Gray turns 36 this year, and projections have him profiled as more of an SP3 or SP4. Still, the move to Boston should give him more win equity, and he is worth consideration in the middle rounds.
|
|
107.
Jo Adell
CF,RF - LAA
Jo Adell took a legitimate step forward in 2025, clubbing 37 home runs with a .249 ISO and 112 Rbat+, both comfortably above league average. His quality-of-contact metrics backed it up, as he posted a career-best 91.7 mph average exit velocity and 50.1% hard-hit rate, signaling that the power surge was skill-driven rather than fluky. While the strikeout rate (26.4%) remains elevated and caps his batting average ceiling, the improved damage on contact supports his projected 30-plus homer output in 2026. Adell has transitioned from post-hype lottery ticket to viable OF3 with impact power, though managers should still build around batting average volatility.
|
|
108.
Nathan Eovaldi
SP - TEX
Nathan Eovaldi delivered one of the most dominant seasons of his career in 2025, posting a microscopic 1.73 ERA with elite run suppression backed by a .194 opponent average and a career-best 26.0% strikeout rate. Durability remains the primary concern entering his age-36 season, but 2026 projections still view him as a high-quality rotation anchor with strong ratios and solid strikeout volume when healthy. In fantasy formats, Eovaldi profiles as an SP2 whose value hinges on workload but whose efficiency can meaningfully outperform his draft cost.
|
|
109.
Luis Robert Jr.
CF - NYM
After a breakout 2023 campaign (38 HR, 20 SB, 130 OPS+), Luis Robert Jr. has taken a clear step back offensively over the past two seasons, posting a .223/.297/.364 line with a below-average 88 Rbat+ in 2025. The underlying metrics show declining contact quality and elevated swing-and-miss, though his 26.0% strikeout rate in 2025 was at least an improvement from the 33.2% mark in 2024. His BABIP cratered to .274 in 2025 despite still solid exit velocity and hard-hit rates, suggesting some room for batting-average rebound, while his speed remains a major asset after swiping 33 bases. Even with a modest projected rebound in 2026, Robert's volatile plate discipline and recent production downturn make him a risky early-round investment compared to his peak fantasy value.
|
|
110.
Jacob Misiorowski
SP - MIL
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.
|
|
111.
Luke Keaschall
2B - MIN
Luke Keaschall was highly productive in his 49-game debut in 2025, slashing .302/.382/.445 with an elite 14% strikeout rate that underscores his advanced bat-to-ball skills. He also went 14-for-17 on stolen base attempts (82.4% success rate), adding category juice that plays up in roto formats. Keaschall profiles as a batting-average stabilizer with 20+ SB upside and emerging run-production value in deeper mixed leagues.
|
|
112.
Drake Baldwin
C - ATL
Drake Baldwin broke out in 2025, finishing with a .274/.341/.469 slash line, 19 home runs and an .810 OPS (126 OPS+) across 446 plate appearances, good for 3.3 WAR and a runner-up Rookie of the Year finish. Baldwin is a clear riser at a thin catcher position. Catchers who combine above-average power (4.3% HR rate, .195 ISO) with strong contact skills are rare, and his everyday role in Atlanta further boosts counting-stat reliability. If the 2026 projections maintain anything close to his rookie rate production over a fuller workload, Baldwin profiles as a top-tier fantasy catcher with a stable floor and legitimate 20-25 home run upside.
|
|
113.
Emmet Sheehan
SP - LAD
Emmet Sheehan took a meaningful step forward in 2025, improving nearly every underlying indicator. His strikeout rate jumped to 30.6% (up from 25.8%), supported by a 10.9 K/9 and a sharp drop in walk rate (7.6%), leading to a strong 4.05 K/BB ratio. Opponents managed just a .185 batting average and .568 OPS against him, and his HR rate was cut nearly in half (4.4% to 2.4%). His 2026 projections hold near a double-digit K/9 with solid ratios, Sheehan profiles as a high-upside SP3 in 12-team formats with SP2 weeks when the command is dialed in. On a strong Dodgers roster, the win equity further boosts his fantasy appeal, making him a worthwhile mid-round target for managers chasing strikeouts without paying ace prices.
|
|
114.
Zack Wheeler
SP - PHI
Zack Wheeler followed up his dominant 2024 with an even sharper skill set in 2025, posting a career-best 11.73 K/9 and 33.3% strikeout rate alongside a stellar 27.7% K-BB%. His 2.71 ERA was supported by a 2.48 xERA, though a spike to 1.14 HR/9 and a lofty 82.4% strand rate suggest some regression baked into that surface line. The question for Wheeler is how he will recover from the thoracic outlet surgery he underwent last season. Recovery is listed as 6 to 8 months, so the chances of him being ready for Opening Day are slim to none, but the latest report is that it "shouldn't be too long" after that. All of this makes him a high-risk, high-reward pitcher capable of being the SP1 he's been, but fantasy managers should count on some regression based on the injury and the fact that he will be 36 this season.
|
|
115.
Brandon Nimmo
LF,CF,RF - TEX
Brandon Nimmo remains one of fantasy baseball's quieter contributors, consistently delivering well-rounded production without much buzz. Now 32, he posted 25 home runs with 81 runs scored, 92 RBI, and 13 steals while batting .262/.324/.436—numbers that closely mirror his career norms. The one notable blemish was a career-low 7.7% walk rate, marking the first time it dipped below double digits. Heading into his age-33 season, expectations should be steady but cautious, especially after his move to Texas removes the lineup insulation he previously enjoyed hitting near Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto, making a modest step back in 2026 a reasonable assumption.
|
|
116.
Nick Lodolo
SP - CIN
Nick Lodolo finally delivered the healthy, front-line season managers have been waiting for in 2025, logging 156.2 innings with a 3.33 ERA, 1.08 WHIP, and career-best 4.8% walk rate. The improved command was the separator, as his BB% dropped sharply while maintaining a strong 24.3% strikeout rate and suppressing hard contact (87.6 mph EV). Projections forecast another step forward in workload with ratios that remain comfortably above league average, positioning Lodolo as a high-end SP2 with SP1 upside if the command gains hold.
|
|
117.
Brandon Woodruff
SP - MIL
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.
|
|
118.
Michael King
SP - SD
Michael King's transition to a full-time starter in San Diego paid off in 2024, but 2025 brought some mild regression and missed time. After logging 173 2/3 innings with a 2.95 ERA and 27.7% strikeout rate in 2024, he threw just 73.1 innings in 2025 with his strikeout rate dipping to 24.7% and his HR/9 jumping from 0.9 to 1.5. Projections expect a rebound in workload and a return to mid-3.00s ratios, which aligns more closely with his 2024 form than last year's abbreviated campaign. King still misses bats at an above-average clip and limits batting average against (.225 career), but his margin for error narrows when the home run rate spikes. He profiles as a high-end SP3 with SP2 upside if the strikeouts tick back toward the 27-28% range and he pushes past 160 innings again.
|
|
119.
Chase Burns
SP,RP - CIN
Chase Burns flashed frontline bat-missing ability in his 2025 debut. Looking ahead to 2026, the projections lean into the strikeout upside while forecasting some ERA regression toward his underlying metrics as he secures a steadier rotation role. If the workload climbs into a full-season starter's range, Burns profiles as a high-K SP with ratios that may fluctuate week to week. In fantasy, he's best deployed as an SP3/SP4 in mixed leagues, with legitimate breakout potential if the command tightens and the batted-ball profile stabilizes.
|
|
120.
Agustin Ramirez
C,DH - MIA
Agustín Ramírez took his lumps as a 23-year-old rookie in 2025, slashing .231/.287/.413 with 21 home runs and 16 steals across 136 games. With modest plate-discipline growth, the 2026 projections point toward improved run production and a step forward in overall efficiency, making Ramírez a clear fantasy sleeper entering his age-24 season. The power-speed blend is already bankable in standard formats, and any OBP rebound would push him into the top tier at his position.
|
|
121.
Will Smith
C - LAD
Will Smith rebounded in 2025 with one of the most efficient offensive seasons of his career, slashing .296/.404/.497 with a 152 OPS+ across 110 games. Improved plate discipline helped offset a modest 20.4% strikeout rate, and his .345 BABIP wasn't entirely fluky given the quality of contact. Projections peg some batting average regression but maintain him as an elite offensive catcher thanks to stable power (mid-20s HR pace over a full season) and strong OBP skills in the middle of a loaded Dodgers lineup. Smith should be drafted as a top-tier catcher in all formats, with OBP leagues especially benefiting from his elevated walk rate and run-production environment.
|
|
122.
Cam Schlittler
SP - NYY
Cam Schlitter emerged as a high-upside arm for the Yankees in 2025, posting a 2.96 ERA across 14 starts with a 27.6% strikeout rate that comfortably outpaced the league average (22.2%). Looking ahead to 2026, projections build on that strong rookie foundation, forecasting a larger workload with mid-3.00s ratios and above-average strikeout totals over a full season. If he maintains the strikeout gains while trimming the walks closer to league average, Schlitter has SP3 upside with room for more in favorable matchups. He's a strong target in the middle rounds of drafts, particularly for managers prioritizing strikeouts and upside over pure ratio safety.
|
|
123.
Andy Pages
LF,CF,RF - LAD
Andy Pages took a significant step forward in 2025, improving across the board. He ended with a .272/.313/.461 line, 27 home runs, and 14 stolen bases over 624 plate appearances after a more modest rookie campaign in 2024. In a sea of aging superstars, Andy Pages will be 25 in 2026 and offers a little of everything for fantasy managers. He has 20/10 potential and had 70+ runs and RBIs in 2025. The outfield position seems crowded in Los Angeles, but Pages slots into the lineup well and seems to have Dave Roberts's trust. He is climbing draft boards, but remains appropriately priced and a solid OF3 option.
|
|
124.
Taylor Ward
LF - BAL
Once again, Taylor Ward delivered a season that was as maddening as it was productive for fantasy managers. He set career highs across the board, launching 36 home runs with 86 runs scored and 103 RBIs, while adding his usual handful of steals (four). The downside was a rough .228 batting average, a reminder of Ward's well-documented inconsistency. His month-to-month splits tell the story: he caught fire in May with a .255 average and 10 homers, only to cool off in June, hitting .204 with four long balls. There are reasons for optimism heading into 2026, including a contract-year motivation, an upgraded offensive environment after his move to Baltimore, and back-to-back healthy seasons. A 30-homer campaign with roughly 75-80 runs is within reach, but expecting another 100-RBI season is likely a stretch. If you roster Ward, prepare for volatility—smooth rides have never really been part of the package.
|
|
125.
Ryan Helsley
RP - BAL
|
|
126.
Sandy Alcantara
SP - MIA
Sandy Alcantara's 2025 season was a clear step back, as his ERA ballooned to 5.36 with a diminished 19.1% strikeout rate and a career-worst 45.1% hard-hit rate allowed. Projections expect some normalization, particularly in ERA and WHIP, but not a full return to his 2022 dominance. Without a rebound in strikeout rate or ground-ball lean, Alcantara profiles more as a volume-based SP3/SP4. The innings floor still carries value in deeper formats, but managers drafting him as a bounce-back ace are assuming skills growth that hasn't yet reappeared in the underlying data.
|
|
127.
Daniel Palencia
RP - CHC
|
|
128.
Ozzie Albies
2B - ATL
Ozzie Albies took a clear step back in 2025, slashing .240/.306/.365 with 16 homers. His ISO cratered to .124 (down from .233 in 2023), with a dip in average exit velocity (87.5 mph) and hard-hit rate (30.7%) driving the power regression. While he rebounded to 157 games and chipped in 14 steals, his declining run production reflected a more contact-oriented, lower-impact profile. The 2026 projections forecast a modest power rebound with improved run totals, but not a full return to peak production. Albies now profiles as a lower-end top-10 second baseman who can still be helpful in the right roster build.
|
|
129.
Matt Chapman
3B - SF
Matt Chapman followed up his excellent 2024 with a solid but slightly muted 2025, as the power dipped to 21 home runs and the batting average slid to .231 despite a strong .340 OBP. Plate discipline remained a plus, and the underlying power was still present, but reduced games played and fewer counting stats capped his fantasy ceiling compared to the prior year. Third base remains a thinner position, which helps preserve his value even as the speed contribution continues to fade in his early 30s. Heading into 2026, Chapman profiles as a steady but unspectacular corner infielder, reliable for power and OBP formats, but unlikely to return to peak-level fantasy production.
|
|
130.
Dansby Swanson
SS - CHC
Dansby Swanson delivered another steady two-way season in 2025, posting 24 HR and 20 SB while improving his quality of contact (47.8% HardHit, 90.1 mph EV). His power rebounded from 2024 as his ISO climbed back to .173 and his fly-ball rate ticked up, supporting a return to the 20+ homer range. While his 26% strikeout rate caps batting average upside, his consistent playing time and renewed stolen-base aggression keep his five-category floor stable. Entering 2026 with projections again hovering around a 20/15-20 profile, Swanson profiles as a reliable middle-infield fantasy riser thanks to stable power, speed, and everyday volume.
|
|
131.
Jakob Marsee
LF,CF - MIA
Jakob Marsee impressed in his 2025 debut, slashing .292/.363/.478 with five homers and 14 steals across just 234 plate appearances, but the sample size was extremely limited and came with a lofty .357 BABIP that may be difficult to sustain. Projections anticipate regression at the plate, forecasting a .231 average with 13 homers but an impactful 31 steals over a larger workload. If Marsee secures everyday at-bats, his speed-driven fantasy profile makes him an intriguing sleeper in roto formats, though managers should expect batting-average volatility as pitchers adjust.
|
|
132.
Drew Rasmussen
SP - TB
Everyone seems to be forgetting the Rays are moving back into their spacious, pitcher-friendly ballpark in 2026 and ranking Drew Rasmussen way too low. He gave up more than 1.0 HR/9 for the first time in his career, but allowed twice as many at home in George Steinbrenner Field, which he won't have to deal with this season. His strikeout rate is middle of the road at 21.7%, but his walk rate is an impressive 6.3%, offering a WHIP below 1.10 every year of his career. He started 31 games last season, and even though his xERA (3.43) was higher than his actual (2.76), his ERA and FIP numbers from the previous two years, when he got to pitch at Tropicana Field, were stellar. It's worth it to target all of the Rays pitchers, but Rasmussen leads the way and would make a solid SP3 or SP4 on any fantasy pitching staff.
|
|
133.
Luis Castillo
SP - SEA
Luis Castillo remains a reliable innings-eater, but his 2025 profile showed continued erosion in strikeout rate (21.7% K%) and rising hard contact (46.5% HardHit), limiting his fantasy ceiling. Projections reflect more of the same: solid ratios and workload, but middling strikeout totals compared to the top fantasy arms. Castillo is still a dependable rotation anchor in deeper formats, though fantasy managers should no longer pay for peak-era upside.
|
|
134.
Raisel Iglesias
RP - ATL
|
|
135.
Lawrence Butler
CF,RF - ATH
Lawrence Butler followed his 2024 breakout with a more volatile 2025 campaign, posting a .234/.306/.404 line with 21 homers and 22 steals across 630 PA while his strikeout rate climbed to 28.4%. The underlying power remained solid (90.0 mph average exit velocity, 44.4% hard-hit rate), but a drop in ISO (.228
|
|
136.
Ceddanne Rafaela
2B,CF - BOS
Ceddanne Rafaela took a meaningful step forward in 2025, emerging as a clear fantasy riser after trimming his strikeout rate from 26.4% in 2024 to 19.9% while boosting his ISO to .165. While his .295 OBP still limited his runs ceiling in standard formats, Rafaela's elite defense secures everyday playing time, and his 80% SB success rate could add impactful speed to a roster. If the 2026 projections hold near a 15-18 HR, 18-22 SB pace with incremental OBP growth, Rafaela profiles as a high-floor middle-round target whose category juice outweighs the modest plate-discipline concerns.
|
|
137.
Jeff Hoffman
RP - TOR
|
|
138.
Ryan Pepiot
SP - TB
Ryan Pepiot logged a career-high 167 2/3 innings in 2025, but the underlying metrics point to mild regression risk after his ERA rose to 3.86 with a 4.36 FIP. The 2026 projections peg him for similar volume with a mid-3.00s ERA and roughly a strikeout per inning, reinforcing his profile as a stable SP3/4 in fantasy formats. Pepiot's swing-and-miss ability remains intact, and the move back to Tropicana Field should correct the issues with the long ball. However, draft him for ratio stability and workload rather than expecting another skills leap.
|
|
139.
Spencer Strider
SP - ATL
Spencer Strider's 2025 was a clear step back from his 2022-23 dominance, with sharp declines in strikeout rate (24.3% from elite 36%+ levels), rising hard-hit rate (42.6%), and a career-worst 4.45 ERA that mirrored weaker underlying command. While velocity and bat-missing ability weren't lost entirely, his reduced K/BB profile and elevated damage on contact capped his fantasy ceiling. The 2026 projections still view Strider as a high-strikeout arm, but no longer in a tier of his own, reflecting durability concerns and a thinner margin for error. A partial rebound in strikeouts could still make him a strong SP2 rather than the automatic ace he once was.
|
|
140.
Jacob Wilson
SS - ATH
Jacob Wilson took a major step forward in 2025, finishing second in AL Rookie of the Year voting. His elite 7.5% strikeout rate and 84.1 mph average exit velocity underscore his contact-over-power profile, but a 52.4% ground-ball rate and modest 2.5% HR rate cap the overall ceiling. The 2026 projection (.296/.350/.435, 12 HR, 5 SB in 472 PA) reflects some batting average regression from a .317 BABIP, though his bat-to-ball skills should keep him a category stabilizer. Wilson is more of a high-floor MI option than a true breakout candidate, but if fantasy managers load up on power early, that almost-.300 batting average would be a welcome addition.
|
|
141.
MacKenzie Gore
SP - TEX
MacKenzie Gore followed up his 2024 step forward with another strikeout-heavy season in 2025, posting a career-best K-rate (27%+) while maintaining improved walk control compared to his early MLB years. Projections suggest he is a mid-rotation arm, forecasting solid strikeouts with league-average ERA and WHIP over a full workload. At age 27, Gore looks like a fantasy SP3/SP4 whose upside is tied to further command gains. The move to Texas could boost his win total, but only if the other metrics continue to improve.
|
|
142.
Robbie Ray
SP - SF
Robbie Ray rebounded in 2025 with a 3.65 ERA and 1.21 WHIP across 182.1 innings for San Francisco, earning an All-Star nod after an injury-marred 2023 and abbreviated 2024. Looking ahead to 2026, projections point to stable mid-rotation production rather than a return to ace-level dominance. Ray's declining strikeout trend (from 32% in 2021 to sub-25% in 2025) caps his fantasy ceiling, but his ability to take the ball for 30+ starts and limit damage keeps his floor relatively intact.
|
|
143.
Shota Imanaga
SP - CHC
Shota Imanaga followed up a brilliant 2024 debut (2.91 ERA, 25.1% K rate, 4.0% BB rate) with a more volatile 2025 campaign, as his ERA climbed to 3.73 and his strikeout rate dipped to 20.6%. While he continued to limit walks at an elite clip (4.6% BB%) and suppress batting average (.218 BAA), a spike in home run rate (5.5% HR%) and hard-hit contact (43.9%) led to a sharp jump in FIP (4.86). Fantasy managers should view Imanaga as a mild faller entering 2026 drafts, though his strong command and projected workload stability keep him firmly in SP3 territory if the homer regression stabilizes.
|
|
144.
Blake Snell
SP - LAD
Blake Snell remains one of fantasy baseball's most volatile aces. His 2025 season with Los Angeles featured a dominant 2.35 ERA and strong run prevention metrics, but it came in just 61.1 innings. Projections again favor strong ratios and well-above-average strikeout rates, though modest innings expectations cap his overall fantasy ceiling. Snell's swing-and-miss stuff still plays at a Cy Young level when healthy, but his elevated walk rates continue to introduce WHIP volatility. He is a high-risk SP2 / ratio-boosting upside play, best suited for managers willing to absorb innings risk in exchange for elite per-inning production.
|
|
145.
Trevor Rogers
SP - BAL
Trevor Rogers' 2025 rebound was dramatic, highlighted by a 1.81 ERA, elite run prevention (223 ERA+), and sharp ratios driven by improved command (6.9 BB%) and a return to missing bats (24.3 K%). The advanced profile supports the breakout: opponents managed just a .503 OPS with a suppressed BABIP (.228). After multiple injuries and poor performances from 2022-24, Rogers demonstrated more stability and efficiency without a full return to peak strikeout volume. The 2026 projections understandably bake in some regression from ace-level run prevention, but Rogers profiles as a strong SP3 with upside in formats that reward ratios, especially if his walk gains hold.
|
|
146.
Gavin Williams
SP - CLE
Gavin Williams re-established himself as a high-upside rotation anchor in 2025, posting a 3.06 ERA and 3.8 WAR across 167.2 innings. If his 2026 projections forecast even modest gains in command, Williams profiles as a fantasy riser with SP2 upside; however, without tangible walk-rate improvement, he remains a ratio-risk arm despite the strikeout ceiling.
|
|
147.
Ranger Suarez
SP - BOS
Ranger Suárez quietly delivered his best all-around season in 2025, pairing a 3.20 ERA with career-best walk suppression (5.8 BB%) while holding hitters to a sub-.680 OPS for the second straight year. His strikeout rate (23.2%) remained stable, but the real growth came from improved command and softer contact, as his HardHit rate dipped to a career low despite a slight drop in ground-ball rate. The 2026 projections largely bank on more of the same: mid-3.00s ratios, solid volume, and strong WHIP support driven by control rather than overpowering stuff. While he lacks true ace-level strikeout upside, Suárez's durability, efficiency, and run-prevention profile make him a solid addition to fantasy rotations.
|
|
148.
Bubba Chandler
SP - PIT
The Pirates faced criticism for keeping Bubba Chandler in Triple-A in 2025, but he was promoted in late August. The 23-year-old righty looked like a potential frontline starter He demonstrated his readiness with a 99-mph fastball, 89-mph slider and a 92-mph changeup that generated a 39.6% whiff rate in the majors. Chandler is going to cost you on draft day, as he is one of the darlings of the fantasy baseball world. But if he delivers what is expected, it will be worth paying up in drafts.
|
|
149.
Steven Kwan
LF,CF - CLE
Steven Kwan took a step back offensively after three straight productive seasons. His lack of power continues to cap his ceiling, but he still contributed solid category juice with 81 runs scored, 21 steals, and a .272 batting average. Kwan's elite bat-to-ball skills remain intact, evidenced by an 8.7% strikeout rate, though his 7.9% walk rate ranked just 47th percentile per Statcast. Entering his age-28 season, there's room for his batting average and on-base percentage to rebound closer to prior highs. Slated to remain Cleveland's leadoff hitter, he should again flirt with 85 runs if the lineup cooperates. While Kwan remains a useful fantasy outfielder in the OF3/OF4 range, managers may find more upside among similarly priced options on draft day.
|
|
150.
Ian Happ
LF - CHC
After posting offensive WAR totals in the 17 range for three straight seasons, Ian Happ took a noticeable step back in 2025, finishing at 9.1. The decline was driven primarily by a sharp drop in stolen bases, as he went from regularly reaching double digits to just six. Otherwise, his production was largely unchanged. Happ finished with 23 home runs, 87 runs scored, 79 RBIs, and a .243/.342/.420 slash line. That profile is a reasonable expectation again in 2026. He has appeared in at least 150 games in four consecutive seasons, and Chicago continues to rely on his steady presence in the lineup. With free agency looming in 2027, there's also a chance for a modest uptick in power. Happ profiles as a dependable OF3 option for fantasy managers in 2026.
|
|
151.
Willson Contreras
1B - BOS
Willson Contreras' 2025 season remained solid by raw numbers, but the same power-and-average output now plays closer to replacement level at a deeper offensive position. The shift away from catcher should help with durability and volume, yet it also raises the bar for fantasy relevance compared to his peers. In 2026 drafts, Contreras is better viewed as a corner infield depth option than a lineup anchor, with real-life value exceeding his fantasy impact.
|
|
152.
Tanner Bibee
SP - CLE
Tanner Bibee took a noticeable step back in 2025, posting a 4.24 ERA and 4.34 FIP across a career-high 182.1 innings after delivering sub-3.50 ERAs in each of his first two seasons. The biggest red flag was a sharp dip in strikeout rate (21.3% K%) paired with a career-worst 3.5% HR rate, as his four-seam/slider combo generated fewer whiffs and more damaging contact despite a heavier ground-ball lean (44.6% GB%). Projections forecasting stabilization rather than a full rebound, Bibee profiles as a mild fantasy faller entering draft season; he is more SP3 than frontline anchor unless the strikeout rate bounces back.
|
|
153.
Yainer Diaz
C,DH - HOU
|
|
154.
Pete Fairbanks
RP - MIA
|
|
155.
Matt McLain
2B - CIN
|
|
156.
Brenton Doyle
CF - COL
Brenton Doyle took a major step forward in 2024 with 23 HR and 30 SB, but his 2025 season regressed offensively (.233/.274/.376, 72 OPS+). Despite the step back, Doyle's underlying quality of contact actually improved in 2025 (89.2 mph EV, 44.8% HardHit). His elite defense keeps him locked into everyday playing time in Colorado, preserving fantasy value through volume and speed. Projections have him hitting around 19 HR with 20 SB and a .248 AVG, Doyle profiles as a power-speed sleeper who can deliver another 20/20 season if his plate discipline rebounds closer to his 2024 levels.
|
|
157.
Ivan Herrera
C,DH - STL
Ivan Herrera followed up his 2024 breakout with another step forward in 2025, logging 452 plate appearances and posting a .284/.373/.464 line with 19 home runs and a 140 Rbat+. His gains were backed by skills growth: a career-best 18.6% strikeout rate, 9.5% walk rate and 91.2 mph average exit velocity, along with a jump to a .180 ISO. While his BABIP dipped to .315, his rOBA (.372) and hard-hit rate (48.2%) supported the production, reinforcing that the bat is driving the value rather than batted-ball luck. The 2026 projections maintain him as an above-average offensive catcher with mid-to-high teens power and strong on-base skills, though a full repeat of last year's efficiency likely regresses slightly. Even with modest pull and fly-ball rates, Herrera's improving contact quality and stable plate discipline give him one of the higher offensive floors at the position. He only had 14 appearances at catcher in 2025, so check your league's position eligibility or prepare to have him only as a DH for a while into 2026.
|
|
158.
Edward Cabrera
SP - CHC
Edward Cabrera put together his most complete season in 2025, logging a career-high 137 2/3 innings with a 3.53 ERA, 1.23 WHIP and a career-best 8.3% walk rate. The improved command was the key development, as his strikeout rate (25.8%) remained comfortably above league average while his BB% dipped closer to MLB norms (8.4%). Projections suggest similar strikeout production with manageable walks, Cabrera profiles as a high-upside SP3 in fantasy with room for more if the control gains stick.
|
|
159.
Kyle Stowers
LF,CF,RF - MIA
Kyle Stowers finally translated his loud tools into production in 2025, slashing .288/.368/.544 with 25 home runs across 457 plate appearances for Miami. The quality of contact remained strong (52.2% hard-hit rate), but the key shift was a more balanced batted-ball profile and improved swing decisions that allowed his power to play in games. Heading into 2026, projections expect some regression from the near-.900 OPS peak, but still forecast Stowers as a middle-of-the-order bat with 25-homer upside and above-average on-base skills. He's best viewed as a solid OF3 with upside in five-outfielder formats, offering bankable power and run production as long as the improved approach holds.
|
|
160.
Josh Hader
RP - HOU
|
|
161.
Xavier Edwards
2B,SS - MIA
Xavier Edwards followed up a breakout 2024 (.328/.397/.423, 129 OPS+) with a heavier workload in 2025, logging 619 PA but seeing his efficiency normalize (.283/.343/.353, 94 OPS+). The batted-ball profile supports the pullback: his .330 BABIP was far less inflated than 2024's .398 mark. Encouragingly, he trimmed his strikeout rate to 14.2% and maintained strong contact skills, giving him a stable batting-average floor even if the run production remains modest. Edwards' fantasy value hinges on lineup spot and volume; if he sticks near the top of Miami's order, he's a useful MI target for managers chasing average and speed without sacrificing plate discipline. Just don't draft him expecting meaningful power growth.
|
|
162.
Emilio Pagan
RP - CIN
|
|
163.
Jac Caglianone
1B,RF - KC
|
|
164.
Bryan Reynolds
LF,CF,RF,DH - PIT
After years of steady production, Bryan Reynolds showed real signs of decline. His strikeout rate climbed to 26.5% and he posted a career-worst .245/.318/.402 slash line. As he enters his age-31 season, fantasy managers should be prepared for increased inconsistency. Reynolds is still projected for around 20 home runs, but his run and RBI totals will suffer in a weak offense, and his batting average is more likely to settle near .250 than his career .271 mark. At this stage, he profiles better as an OF3 or OF4 rather than a reliable, every-week fantasy starter.
|
|
165.
Tatsuya Imai
SP - HOU
|
|
166.
Spencer Torkelson
1B - DET
Spencer Torkelson rebounded strongly in 2025, posting a career-best .240/.333/.456 slash with 31 homers and a 117 OPS+. The plate discipline gains were real, as his walk rate climbed and his overall offensive value returned to comfortably above league average. FantasyPros 2026 projections build on that bounce-back, forecasting another 30-homer season with solid run production thanks to his locked-in everyday role at first base/DH. Torkelson's age-26 power prime makes him a stable corner-infield target with upside rather than the risky asset he appeared to be a year ago.
|
|
167.
Brandon Lowe
2B - PIT
Brandon Lowe rebounded in 2025, earning an All-Star nod while clubbing 31 home runs across 134 games, his highest total since 2021. His underlying metrics remained strong, but a declining 6.9% walk rate and 26.9% strikeout rate capped his OBP at .307 despite a career-best .297 BABIP. Projections forecast another 30-homer campaign with a batting average in the .245-.255 range, reinforcing his profile as a power-first middle infielder with limited speed.
|
|
168.
Cade Horton
SP - CHC
Cade Horton broke through in 2025 with a 2.67 ERA and 1.09 WHIP across 118 innings, finishing second in NL Rookie of the Year voting after posting a 144 ERA+. His underlying profile was strong but not overpowering, as his 3.58 FIP and 7.4 K/9 suggest more command-and-contact management than bat-missing dominance. The 2026 projections push him closer to the mid-3.00s in ERA with a modest bump in workload, which frames Horton as a high-floor SP3/SP4. Without elite strikeout volume, his value will hinge on efficiency, wins, and ratio stability in a competitive Cubs rotation. Draft him as a steady innings stabilizer, but avoid paying for a repeat sub-2.75 ERA unless there's tangible growth in swing-and-miss.
|
|
169.
Carlos Rodon
SP - NYY
Carlos Rodon delivered one of the most complete seasons of his career in 2025, posting a 3.09 ERA across 195.1 innings with a 1.05 WHIP and 203 strikeouts, earning Cy Young consideration. Projections expect some ERA regression closer to his FIP (3.78 in 2025) and normalized BABIP. He is currently recovering from an elbow procedure and is projected to begin his season in late April/early May, but if all goes as planned, he comes at a good discount on draft day for the potential he brings.
|
|
170.
Adley Rutschman
C - BAL
Adley Rutschman enters 2026 as a clear fantasy rebound candidate after a disappointing, injury-shortened 2025 season. His plate discipline remains above league average and the power indicators weren't catastrophic. With 2026 projections forecasting a bounce-back toward his career norms, Rutschman profiles as a discounted catcher who could outperform his draft slot if the batted-ball luck normalizes.
|
|
171.
Alec Burleson
1B,LF,RF,DH - STL
Alec Burleson may not carry the same buzz as some other OF3 or OF4 options, but his profile is trending in the right direction as he enters his age-27 season. He took a noticeable step forward in 2024, appearing in 139 games while posting 18 home runs, 69 RBI, and 54 runs scored, along with a .290/.343/.459 slash line and an .802 OPS. His appeal is rooted in strong contact skills, evidenced by a modest 14.5% strikeout rate, paired with enough power to contribute in multiple categories. Locked into a prominent spot near the top of St. Louis' lineup, Burleson offers inexpensive batting-average stability and quiet upside for fantasy managers in 2026 drafts.
|
|
172.
Kenley Jansen
RP - DET
|
|
173.
Trey Yesavage
SP - TOR
Trey Yesavage's 2025 debut was brief but intriguing. The underlying profile jumps off the page: a massive 61.5% hard-hit rate allowed and 94.0 mph average exit velocity suggest his 0.0% HR rate and .273 opponent SLG were unlikely to hold over a larger sample. He did generate ground balls at a strong 56.4% clip, which could help him manage damage in Rogers Centre, but an 11.3% walk rate points to command volatility. Projections appear to price in regression toward league-average ratios with solid strikeout totals over a larger workload. He is more of a late-round flier or watch-list candidate in standard formats rather than a draft-day priority.
|
|
174.
Jonathan Aranda
1B - TB
Jonathan Aranda broke out in 2025, slashing .316/.393/.489 with a 146 OPS+ across 422 plate appearances. Projections dial back the average but maintain strong on-base skills and mid-20s homer pace. With no speed component and most of his value tied to bat-first production, Aranda profiles as a high-floor corner infield option in OBP formats, though managers should price in batting-average normalization rather than paying for a repeat of the .300-plus mark.
|
|
175.
Jack Flaherty
SP - DET
|
|
176.
Aaron Nola
SP - PHI
|
|
177.
Ryan Walker
RP - SF
|
|
178.
Noelvi Marte
3B,RF - CIN
Noelvi Marte showed some growth in 2025, rebounding from a rough 2024 to post a .263/.300/.448 line with 14 homers and double-digit steals in just 90 games. Versatility across third base and the outfield should help him maintain regular playing time, even if his glove remains a work in progress. FantasyPros 2026 projections reflect a young hitter still trending upward, making Marte an appealing upside play in deeper formats.
|
|
179.
Sal Stewart
1B - CIN
|
|
180.
Shane Baz
SP - BAL
|
|
181.
Mike Trout
CF,RF,DH - LAA
|
|
182.
Chandler Simpson
LF,CF - TB
|
|
183.
Ezequiel Tovar
SS - COL
Ezequiel Tovar's 2025 season was a step back on the surface (.253/.294/.400 in 95 games), but his underlying profile remained relatively stable, including a solid 39% hard-hit rate and improved strikeout rate (25.1%) compared to his 2024 breakout. Injuries limited his counting stats after a 26-HR, 3.8 WAR campaign in 2024, yet his batted-ball mix still supports mid-20s power in Coors Field. The 2026 projections (21 HR, 10 SB, 79 R, 74 RBI, .263 AVG) suggest a rebound to useful across-the-board production at the shortstop position. With everyday playing time in Colorado and a history of durable volume prior to 2025, Tovar profiles as a fantasy riser capable of returning top-12 value at the position if his 2024 power gains reappear over a full season.
|
|
184.
Kris Bubic
SP - KC
|
|
185.
Shane McClanahan
SP - TB
|
|
186.
Heliot Ramos
LF,CF,RF - SF
Heliot Ramos broke out in 2024, but his 2025 follow-up was more solid than spectacular. The good news is his underlying quality of contact held firm (91.8 mph average EV, 47.8% hard-hit rate), while his strikeout rate improved to 22.7%, nearly league average. A more contact-oriented, opposite-field-heavy approach (63.2% to center in 2025) capped his over-the-fence output, but the skills foundation remains stable. Ramos' projections suggest mid-20s homer power and strong run production in an everyday role, Ramos profiles as a solid but unexciting OF4 or OF5 option.
|
|
187.
Daulton Varsho
LF,CF - TOR
|
|
188.
Carlos Estevez
RP - KC
|
|
189.
Wilyer Abreu
LF,CF,RF - BOS
|
|
190.
Zac Gallen
SP - ARI
|
|
191.
Bryson Stott
2B,SS - PHI
Bryson Stott took a step forward in 2025, rebounding from a down 2024 campaign to post a .257/.328/.391 line with 13 homers and 24 steals over 147 games. His underlying profile supports the modest bounce-back: a career-best 9.6% walk rate, 86.9 mph average exit velocity, and 29.5% hard-hit rate remained well below league average. The shift toward more fly balls (29.2% FB rate, 0.68 GB/FB) helped stabilize his power output, but his .134 ISO still caps the ceiling. With 2026 projections forecasting another 20-plus steal season with double-digit homers and steady ratios, Stott profiles as a stable middle-infield option.
|
|
192.
Christian Walker
1B - HOU
|
|
193.
Matthew Boyd
SP - CHC
|
|
194.
Daylen Lile
LF,RF - WSH
|
|
195.
Addison Barger
3B,LF,RF - TOR
Addison Barger took a significant step forward in 2025, improving across the board with a .243/.301/.454 slash, 21 homers, and a league-average 105 OPS+ after struggling mightily as a rookie. The power growth was especially encouraging. While his strikeout rate remains elevated, everyday playing time and defensive versatility at third base and the corner outfield helped solidify his role. Projections reflect cautious optimism, positioning Barger as a late-round sleeper with legitimate 20-plus homer upside if the plate discipline continues to stabilize.
|
|
196.
Royce Lewis
3B - MIN
Royce Lewis's elite upside remains undeniable, but his 2025 season underscored the growing gap between talent and fantasy reliability, as he posted a .237/.283/.388 line with diminished power and run production over 106 games. While his athleticism still shows up with occasional steals and defensive flexibility, the overall offensive profile has slipped closer to below league average. FantasyPros 2026 projections remain cautiously optimistic, but until Lewis can stay on the field and sustain his early-career power, he profiles as a high-variance pick whose draft cost may outweigh the floor in standard formats.
|
|
197.
Trevor Megill
RP - MIL
|
|
198.
Munetaka Murakami
1B,3B - CWS
|
|
199.
Marcus Semien
2B - NYM
|
|
200.
Jorge Polanco
2B,3B,DH - NYM
Jorge Polanco rebounded in 2025, posting a .265/.326/.495 line with 26 home runs and a 134 OPS+ across 138 games for Seattle. Looking ahead to 2026, projections that peg him closer to the low-.250s with 20-23 homers suggest some pullback from last year's career-high ISO (.229) and HR rate (5.0%). That's reasonable given his age, but the improved contact quality and stabilized plate discipline from 2025 give him a higher floor than most mid-tier second basemen. Health remains the primary variable, yet if he approaches 140 games again, Polanco profiles as a strong MI option with 20-plus homer power and counting stats buoyed by everyday run production.
|
|
201.
Kazuma Okamoto
1B,3B - TOR
|
|
202.
Alejandro Kirk
C - TOR
|
|
203.
Adolis Garcia
RF - PHI
Adolis García's production has trended downward since his 2023 peak, with his OPS dropping from .836 that season to .684 in 2024 and .665 in 2025. While his raw power remains intact (92.1 mph average exit velocity in 2025), the results have slipped as his ISO fell to .168 and his walk rate declined to 5.1%, limiting his OBP and run production. The 2026 projections still see useful counting stats (roughly 23 HR, 72 RBI, and double-digit steals), but his rising strikeout totals and declining plate discipline cap the upside. At age 33 with back-to-back below-average offensive seasons (94 rBat+ in both 2024 and 2025), García profiles more as a volatile mid-tier power option than a reliable fantasy cornerstone.
|
|
204.
Andrew Abbott
SP - CIN
|
|
205.
Gleyber Torres
2B - DET
Gleyber Torres reestablished himself as a reliable fantasy middle infielder in 2025 after a down 2024, showing improved plate discipline (career-best walk rate) and a rebound in overall run production following his move to Detroit. While the power remains well below his 2018-19 peak, his 2025 advanced profile points to solid contact quality and a more patient approach that supports a stable AVG/OBP floor. The 2026 projections reflect a continuation of that skill set rather than a return to 30+ homer upside, making him more valuable in OBP formats than standard roto leagues. With minimal speed and capped power, Torres profiles as a low-ceiling but steady fantasy contributor, best viewed as a post-hype sleeper for managers seeking middle-infield stability rather than upside.
|
|
206.
Kerry Carpenter
LF,RF,DH - DET
|
|
207.
Colson Montgomery
3B,SS - CWS
|
|
208.
Jackson Holliday
2B,SS - BAL
|
|
209.
Isaac Paredes
3B - HOU
Isaac Paredes followed up his 2023 breakout with another strong season in 2025, slashing .254/.352/.458 with 20 home runs and a 123 OPS+ in his first year with Houston. While the raw power dipped slightly from its peak, his elite plate discipline and pull-side power remained intact, keeping his rOBA and Rbat+ well above league average. The move to a strong lineup context helped stabilize his counting stats, reinforcing his profile as a reliable corner-infield bat rather than a fluky breakout. FantasyPros 2026 projections continue to view Paredes as a high-floor option with 25-homer upside, making him a steady fantasy contributor even if he no longer carries surprise-star appeal.
|
|
210.
Gerrit Cole
SP - NYY
|
|
211.
Abner Uribe
RP - MIL
|
|
212.
Dennis Santana
RP - PIT
|
|
213.
Francisco Alvarez
C - NYM
|
|
214.
Max Muncy
3B - LAD
|
|
215.
JJ Wetherholt
2B,3B,SS - STL
|
|
216.
Gabriel Moreno
C - ARI
|
|
217.
Kyle Manzardo
1B,DH - CLE
|
|
218.
Jack Leiter
SP - TEX
|
|
219.
Konnor Griffin
SS,CF - PIT
Konnor Griffin entered 2025 as one of the most highly regarded prospects in the lower minors and exceeded expectations after being widely considered the top prep position player in the 2024 First-Year Player Draft. The 6-foot-4, 225-pound infielder combines elite speed and athleticism with impact power, slashing .333/.415/.527 with 21 home runs, 65 steals, and a 21.7% strikeout rate across Single-A, High-A, and Double-A as a 19-year-old. His wRC+ improved at each level, finishing 75% above the Double-A average despite being the second-youngest hitter with 80 plate appearances, behind only Leo De Vries. Once questioned for his hit tool, Griffin now appears on track for a 2026 MLB debut, and a potential extension could accelerate his timeline. He offers defensive versatility but has primarily played shortstop.
|
|
220.
Griffin Jax
RP - TB
|
|
221.
Kevin McGonigle
SS - DET
|
|
222.
Trent Grisham
CF - NYY
|
|
223.
Samuel Basallo
C - BAL
|
|
224.
Andrew Vaughn
1B - MIL
|
|
225.
Jordan Beck
LF,RF - COL
|
|
226.
Luis Garcia
1B,2B - WSH
|
|
227.
Ramon Laureano
LF,CF,RF - SD
|
|
228.
Caleb Durbin
2B,3B - BOS
|
|
229.
Sal Frelick
LF,CF,RF - MIL
|
|
230.
Alec Bohm
1B,3B - PHI
|
|
231.
Xander Bogaerts
SS - SD
Bogaerts showed modest rebound signs in 2025, posting a .263/.328/.391 line with 20 steals across 136 games after an injury-marred 2024 campaign. While his power remains well below his Boston peak, he has had 33 steals over the last two seasons with a 90.9% success rate in 2025. Projections suggest a similar batting average with mid-teens homers and another 15-20 SB season, Bogaerts profiles as a steady middle-infield contributor whose five-category contributions are more valuable than his recent OPS totals indicate.
|
|
232.
Otto Lopez
2B,SS - MIA
|
|
233.
Connelly Early
SP - BOS
|
|
234.
Ryne Nelson
SP,RP - ARI
|
|
235.
Merrill Kelly
SP - ARI
|
|
236.
Brendan Donovan
2B,3B,SS,LF - SEA
|
|
237.
Kodai Senga
SP - NYM
|
|
238.
Masyn Winn
SS - STL
|
|
239.
Bryan Abreu
RP - HOU
|
|
240.
Seranthony Dominguez
RP - CWS
|
|
241.
Jake Burger
1B - TEX
|
|
242.
Ryan Weathers
SP - NYY
|
|
243.
Mickey Moniak
LF,CF,RF - COL
|
|
244.
Shane Smith
SP - CWS
|
|
245.
Marcell Ozuna
DH - PIT
Marcell Ozuna's 2025 campaign marked a steep regression from his elite 2023-2024 peak, as his slash line fell to .232/.355/.400 with 21 home runs across 592 plate appearances. Now eligible only at DH with the Pirates, Ozuna's lack of positional flexibility further caps his fantasy utility. Projections pointing toward solid but no-longer-elite power production more in line with a mid-tier corner bat than a foundational fantasy piece.
|
|
246.
TJ Friedl
LF,CF - CIN
|
|
247.
Jose Soriano
SP - LAA
Jose Soriano took a step back in 2025, posting a 4.26 ERA and 1.40 WHIP across 169 innings as his walk rate spiked (10.8 BB%) and his strikeout rate settled closer to league average. Based on the 2026 projections, he profiles as a mid-rotation innings source rather than a true breakout candidate, with modest strikeout totals limiting his ceiling in standard leagues. Soriano is best viewed as a back-end fantasy starter whose value hinges on workload and matchup management rather than category impact.
|
|
248.
Colton Cowser
LF,CF,RF - BAL
|
|
249.
Joe Musgrove
SP - SD
|
|
250.
Carlos Correa
3B,SS - HOU
|
|
251.
Carter Jensen
C - KC
|
|
252.
Noah Cameron
SP - KC
|
|
253.
Cody Ponce
SP,RP - TOR
|
|
254.
Casey Mize
SP - DET
|
|
255.
Bryce Miller
SP - SEA
|
|
256.
Luis Arraez
1B,2B,DH - SF
|
|
257.
J.T. Realmuto
C - PHI
|
|
258.
Dylan Crews
CF,RF - WSH
|
|
259.
Josh Lowe
LF,CF,RF - LAA
|
|
260.
Chase DeLauter
CF,RF - CLE
|
|
261.
Justin Crawford
CF - PHI
|
|
262.
Jose Caballero
2B,3B,SS,LF,RF - NYY
|
|
263.
Parker Messick
SP - CLE
|
|
264.
Nolan Schanuel
1B - LAA
Nolan Schanuel quietly took a step forward in 2025, trimming his strikeout rate to 12.6% (down from 17.0% in 2024). His 2026 projections suggest more of a high-average, mid-teens home run profile than a true breakout, the improved contact quality and elite bat-to-ball skills give him a stable floor in OBP formats. Schanuel profiles as a deep-league corner infield sleeper, with value tied more to batting average and run production than impact power.
|
|
265.
Mike Burrows
SP,RP - HOU
|
|
266.
Jung Hoo Lee
CF,RF - SF
|
|
267.
Joey Cantillo
SP,RP - CLE
|
|
268.
Shane Bieber
SP - TOR
|
|
269.
David Peterson
SP - NYM
|
|
270.
Brett Baty
2B,3B - NYM
|
|
271.
Hunter Greene
SP - CIN
Heading into 2025, Hunter Greene was on many fantasy analysts' "must-have" lists, and when he was healthy, he showed off the skillset that makes him exciting. He struck out 31.4% of batters, dropped his walk rate to 6.2%, and ended with a swinging strike rate of 15.4%. However, a right groin strain cost him almost two months of the season, limiting his innings to only 107 2/3 in 19 starts. Greene announced he is having surgery on his pitching elbow and will be out until July, so move him down your draft boards as an IL stash.
|
|
272.
Robert Suarez
RP - ATL
|
|
273.
Braxton Ashcraft
SP,RP - PIT
|
|
274.
Will Warren
SP - NYY
|
|
275.
Spencer Steer
1B,LF - CIN
|
|
276.
Andres Gimenez
2B,SS - TOR
|
|
277.
Giancarlo Stanton
LF,RF,DH - NYY
|
|
278.
Miguel Vargas
1B,3B - CWS
|
|
279.
Mitch Keller
SP - PIT
|
|
280.
Cedric Mullins II
CF - TB
|
|
281.
Andrew Painter
SP - PHI
|
|
282.
Dillon Dingler
C - DET
|
|
283.
Kyle Teel
C - CWS
|
|
284.
Robert Garcia
RP - TEX
|
|
285.
Matt Shaw
3B,RF - CHC
|
|
286.
Clay Holmes
SP - NYM
|
|
287.
Mark Vientos
3B,DH - NYM
Mark Vientos failed to build on his 2024 breakout, with his 2025 season showing notable pullbacks. The plate skills did improve slightly (career-best strikeout rate to 24.8%), but the quality-of-contact gains from 2024 didn't hold, leaving him closer to league average overall production. The 2026 projections still lean on his raw power and everyday role potential, but expect more of a low-OBP, mid-20s HR corner bat rather than a true middle-of-the-order force.
|
|
288.
Sean Manaea
SP,RP - NYM
|
|
289.
Roki Sasaki
SP - LAD
|
|
290.
Ryan O'Hearn
1B,LF,RF,DH - PIT
|
|
291.
Brady Singer
SP - CIN
|
|
292.
Grayson Rodriguez
SP - LAA
|
|
293.
Jordan Westburg
2B,3B - BAL
Jordan Westburg followed up his 2024 All-Star breakout with another solid but less impactful 2025, as injuries limited him to 85 games and capped his counting stats. On a per-game basis, his power remained intact (17 HR, .457 SLG), but reduced doubles output and minimal speed kept him from taking the next step. His multi-position eligibility and steady contact quality help stabilize his fantasy floor, particularly in deeper formats. If he can stay healthy and reclaim a full-time role in Baltimore's crowded infield, Westburg still offers sleeper upside as a balanced power contributor entering his age-27 season.
|
|
294.
Yusei Kikuchi
SP - LAA
Yusei Kikuchi remains a reliable but volatile fantasy arm entering 2026, best viewed as a back-end starter in mixed leagues. The underlying batted-ball profile was mostly stable, but a rising walk rate and middling WHIP capped his fantasy ceiling despite near-league-average run prevention. Kikuchi is still useful for innings and strikeouts, but with limited upside and increased ratio risk compared to prior seasons. He's best deployed as a matchup-dependent SP5 rather than a set-and-forget option.
|
|
295.
Austin Wells
C - NYY
|
|
296.
Logan O'Hoppe
C - LAA
|
|
297.
Jeff McNeil
2B,LF,CF,RF - ATH
|
|
298.
Matt Wallner
LF,RF - MIN
|
|
299.
Willi Castro
2B,3B,LF,RF - COL
|
|
300.
Jordan Lawlar
3B,OF - ARI
|
|
301.
Logan Henderson
SP - MIL
|
|
302.
Zach Eflin
SP - BAL
|
|
303.
Cam Smith
RF - HOU
|
|
304.
Michael Wacha
SP - KC
|
|
305.
Zebby Matthews
SP - MIN
|
|
306.
Evan Carter
LF,CF,RF - TEX
|
|
307.
Brayan Bello
SP - BOS
|
|
308.
Ernie Clement
1B,2B,3B,SS - TOR
|
|
309.
Josh Bell
1B,DH - MIN
|
|
310.
Brandon Pfaadt
SP - ARI
|
|
311.
Riley O'Brien
RP - STL
|
|
312.
Carson Benge
CF,RF - NYM
|
|
313.
Chris Bassitt
SP - BAL
|
|
314.
Reid Detmers
RP - LAA
|
|
315.
Colt Keith
1B,2B,3B,DH - DET
Colt Keith took a meaningful step forward in 2025. The power growth was supported by real skill gains, as his ISO jumped from .120 to .157 with a spike in hard-hit rate (35.3% to 43.7%) and average exit velocity (87.8 mph to 90.0 mph). With 2026 projections building on that improved plate discipline and batted-ball authority, Keith profiles as a fantasy riser, especially in OBP formats. While he's unlikely to contribute much in steals, a potential jump into the 18-22 HR range with solid run production at second base gives him stable middle-infield value with room for another step forward entering his age-24 season.
|
|
316.
Cade Cavalli
SP - WSH
|
|
317.
Jasson Dominguez
LF,CF - NYY
|
|
318.
Tyler Stephenson
C - CIN
|
|
319.
Edwin Uceta
RP - TB
|
|
320.
Reynaldo Lopez
SP - ATL
|
|
321.
Grant Taylor
RP - CWS
|
|
322.
Mick Abel
SP - MIN
|
|
323.
Chad Patrick
SP - MIL
|
|
324.
Luis Severino
SP - ATH
|
|
325.
Brooks Lee
2B,3B,SS - MIN
|
|
326.
Clayton Beeter
RP - WSH
|
|
327.
Quinn Priester
SP,RP - MIL
|
|
328.
Seth Lugo
SP - KC
|
|
329.
Bailey Ober
SP - MIN
|
|
330.
Ryan Jeffers
C,DH - MIN
|
|
331.
Tyler Mahle
SP - SF
|
|
332.
Jameson Taillon
SP - CHC
|
|
333.
Dominic Canzone
LF,RF,DH - SEA
|
|
334.
Ian Seymour
SP,RP - TB
|
|
335.
Max Meyer
SP - MIA
|
|
336.
Nolan Arenado
3B - ARI
|
|
337.
Owen Caissie
CF,RF - MIA
|
|
338.
Brandon Marsh
LF,CF - PHI
|
|
339.
Grant Holmes
SP - ATL
|
|
340.
Victor Scott
CF - STL
|
|
341.
Jorge Soler
RF,DH - LAA
|
|
342.
Harrison Bader
LF,CF,RF - SF
|
|
343.
Tommy Edman
2B,3B,CF - LAD
|
|
344.
Jacob Lopez
SP - ATH
|
|
345.
Jordan Walker
LF,RF - STL
|
|
346.
Matthew Liberatore
SP - STL
|
|
347.
Anthony Volpe
SS - NYY
|
|
348.
Justin Steele
SP - CHC
|
|
349.
Josh Jung
3B - TEX
|
|
350.
Kirby Yates
RP - LAA
|
|
351.
Cristian Javier
SP - HOU
|
|
352.
Tyler O'Neill
LF,RF - BAL
|
|
353.
Kyle Harrison
SP,RP - MIL
|
|
354.
Coby Mayo
1B,3B - BAL
|
|
355.
Marcelo Mayer
2B,3B - BOS
|
|
356.
Dylan Beavers
LF,RF - BAL
|
|
357.
Austin Hays
LF,DH - CWS
|
|
358.
Jake McCarthy
LF,CF,RF - COL
|
|
359.
Paul Sewald
RP - ARI
|
|
360.
Taylor Rogers
RP - MIN
|
|
361.
Chase Meidroth
2B,3B,SS - CWS
|
|
362.
Moises Ballesteros
C,DH - CHC
|
|
363.
Jake Cronenworth
1B,2B,SS - SD
|
|
364.
Will Vest
RP - DET
|
|
365.
Bryce Eldridge
1B,DH - SF
|
|
366.
Jonathan India
2B,3B,LF,DH - KC
|
|
367.
Josh Smith
1B,2B,3B,SS,LF,RF - TEX
|
|
368.
Jeremiah Estrada
RP - SD
|
|
369.
Luis Gil
SP - NYY
|
|
370.
Jesus Sanchez
LF,CF,RF - TOR
|
|
371.
Edgar Quero
C,DH - CWS
|
|
372.
JoJo Romero
RP - STL
|
|
373.
J.P. Crawford
SS - SEA
|
|
374.
Robby Snelling
SP - MIA
|
|
375.
Garrett Cleavinger
RP - TB
|
|
376.
Spencer Horwitz
1B - PIT
|
|
377.
Jeffrey Springs
SP - ATH
|
|
378.
Mike Yastrzemski
LF,CF,RF - ATL
|
|
379.
Lenyn Sosa
1B,2B - CWS
|
|
380.
Taj Bradley
SP - MIN
|
|
381.
Carlos Narvaez
C - BOS
|
|
382.
Victor Vodnik
RP - COL
|
|
383.
Nolan Gorman
2B,3B,DH - STL
|
|
384.
Dustin May
SP - STL
|
|
385.
Nick Castellanos
RF - SD
|
|
386.
Kyle Finnegan
RP - DET
|
|
387.
Andrew Benintendi
LF,DH - CWS
|
|
388.
Luisangel Acuna
2B - CWS
|
|
389.
Chris Martin
RP - TEX
|
|
390.
Gavin Sheets
1B,LF,RF,DH - SD
|
|
391.
Slade Cecconi
SP - CLE
|
|
392.
Isaac Collins
LF,RF - KC
|
|
393.
Jordan Romano
RP - LAA
|
|
394.
Lucas Erceg
RP - KC
|
|
395.
Lars Nootbaar
LF,CF,RF - STL
|
|
396.
Nasim Nunez
2B,SS - WSH
|
|
397.
Garrett Whitlock
RP - BOS
|
|
398.
Simeon Woods Richardson
SP - MIN
|
|
399.
Rhett Lowder
SP - CIN
|
|
400.
Zach McKinstry
3B,SS,LF,RF - DET
|
|
401.
Connor Norby
3B - MIA
|
|
402.
Trevor Larnach
LF,RF,DH - MIN
|
|
403.
Matt Svanson
RP - STL
|
|
404.
Kevin Ginkel
RP - ARI
|
|
405.
Cole Young
2B - SEA
|
|
406.
Luis Rengifo
2B,3B,OF - MIL
|
|
407.
Joey Ortiz
SS - MIL
|
|
408.
Ryan McMahon
3B - NYY
|
|
409.
Brandon Sproat
SP - MIL
|
|
410.
Jake Meyers
CF - HOU
|
|
411.
Bo Naylor
C - CLE
|
|
412.
Tanner Scott
RP - LAD
|
|
413.
Brady House
3B - WSH
|
|
414.
Eduardo Rodriguez
SP - ARI
|
|
415.
Michael McGreevy
SP - STL
|
|
416.
Johan Oviedo
SP - BOS
|
|
417.
Justin Sterner
RP - ATH
|
|
418.
Spencer Schwellenbach
SP - ATL
Spencer Schwellenbach quietly took another step forward in 2025, pairing a 3.09 ERA and 0.97 WHIP with elite control (4.1% BB%) and strong contact suppression (.217 BAA, .618 OPS against). His batted-ball profile improved year over year, featuring a higher ground-ball rate (47.1%) and a sub-3% HR rate, helping him outperform league averages despite only modest strikeout totals. He missed time with an elbow fracture, and he will start the season on the 60-day IL with elbow inflammation. He is a risky draft pick who could pay off if the injuries don't derail his entire season, but I wouldn't count on it.
|
|
419.
Landen Roupp
SP - SF
|
|
420.
Jake Mangum
LF,CF,RF - PIT
|
|
421.
Max Scherzer
SP - TOR
|
|
422.
Robert Stephenson
RP - LAA
|
|
423.
Carson Kelly
C - CHC
|
|
424.
Adrian Morejon
RP - SD
|
|
425.
Luis Morales
SP - ATH
|
|
426.
Justin Verlander
SP - DET
|
|
427.
Zack Littell
SP - WSH
|
|
428.
Victor Robles
LF,CF,RF - SEA
|
|
429.
Victor Caratini
C,1B,DH - MIN
|
|
430.
Lourdes Gurriel Jr.
LF - ARI
|
|
431.
Parker Meadows
CF - DET
|
|
432.
Didier Fuentes
SP - ATL
|
|
433.
Jose Berrios
SP - TOR
|
|
434.
Jared Triolo
1B,2B,3B,SS - PIT
|
|
435.
Braxton Garrett
SP - MIA
|
|
436.
Lane Thomas
CF,RF - KC
|
|
437.
Freddy Fermin
C - SD
|
|
438.
Max Muncy
2B,3B,SS - ATH
|
|
439.
Anthony Santander
LF,RF,DH - TOR
|
|
440.
Justin Wrobleski
RP - LAD
|
|
441.
Wenceel Perez
CF,RF - DET
|
|
442.
Denzel Clarke
CF - ATH
|
|
443.
Nick Martinez
SP,RP - TB
|
|
444.
Payton Tolle
SP,RP - BOS
|
|
445.
Rhys Hoskins
1B - CLE
|
|
446.
Carson Williams
SS - TB
|
|
447.
Luke Weaver
RP - NYM
|
|
448.
Michael Soroka
SP,RP - ARI
|
|
449.
Steven Matz
RP - TB
|
|
450.
Foster Griffin
RP - WSH
|
|
451.
Matt Brash
RP - SEA
|
|
452.
Jordan Leasure
RP - CWS
|
|
453.
Kumar Rocker
SP - TEX
|
|
454.
Nick Gonzales
2B,SS - PIT
|
|
455.
Garrett Mitchell
CF,RF - MIL
|
|
456.
Gregory Soto
RP - PIT
|
|
457.
Cole Sands
SP,RP - MIN
|
|
458.
Camilo Doval
RP - NYY
|
|
459.
Hogan Harris
RP - ATH
|
|
460.
Pavin Smith
1B,DH - ARI
|
|
461.
Colt Emerson
SS - SEA
|
|
462.
Anthony Kay
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
463.
Eric Lauer
SP,RP - TOR
|
|
464.
Kyle Leahy
RP - STL
|
|
465.
River Ryan
SP - LAD
|
|
466.
TJ Rumfield
1B - COL
|
|
467.
Matt Strahm
RP - KC
|
|
468.
Jose A. Ferrer
RP - SEA
|
|
469.
Ke'Bryan Hayes
3B - CIN
|
|
470.
Adrian Houser
SP - SF
|
|
471.
Hurston Waldrep
SP - ATL
|
|
472.
Ben Joyce
RP - LAA
|
|
473.
Kody Clemens
1B,2B,LF,RF - MIN
|
|
474.
Miguel Andujar
3B,LF,DH - SD
|
|
475.
Andrew Kittredge
RP - BAL
|
|
476.
Randy Vasquez
SP - SD
|
|
477.
Harry Ford
C - WSH
|
|
478.
Carmen Mlodzinski
SP,RP - PIT
|
|
479.
Patrick Bailey
C - SF
|
|
480.
Jared Jones
SP - PIT
|
|
481.
Paul Goldschmidt
1B - NYY
|
|
482.
Christian Moore
2B - LAA
|
|
483.
Jonah Tong
SP - NYM
|
|
484.
Jared Jones
1B - PIT
|
|
485.
Emerson Hancock
SP,RP - SEA
|
|
486.
Alex Vesia
RP - LAD
|
|
487.
Keibert Ruiz
C - WSH
|
|
488.
Hunter Barco
SP,RP - PIT
|
|
489.
Brayan Rocchio
2B,SS - CLE
|
|
490.
Ha-Seong Kim
2B,SS - ATL
|
|
491.
Mark Leiter Jr.
RP - ATH
|
|
492.
Gabe Speier
RP - SEA
|
|
493.
Shawn Armstrong
RP - CLE
|
|
494.
Kyle Isbel
CF - KC
|
|
495.
Triston Casas
1B - BOS
|
|
496.
Luis Garcia
SS - FA
|
|
497.
Ben Brown
SP,RP - CHC
|
|
498.
Walker Buehler
SP - SD
|
|
499.
Joc Pederson
DH - TEX
|
|
500.
JR Ritchie
SP - ATL
|
|
501.
Jacob Melton
LF,CF - TB
|
|
502.
Jose Alvarado
RP - PHI
|
|
503.
Sean Burke
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
504.
Ryan Waldschmidt
LF,CF,RF - ARI
|
|
505.
Romy Gonzalez
1B,2B - BOS
|
|
506.
Travis Bazzana
2B - CLE
|
|
507.
Alek Thomas
CF - ARI
|
|
508.
Javier Baez
2B,3B,SS,CF - DET
|
|
509.
Danny Jansen
C - TEX
|
|
510.
Hunter Gaddis
RP - CLE
|
|
511.
Seth Halvorsen
RP - COL
|
|
512.
Gabriel Arias
2B,SS - CLE
|
|
513.
Fernando Cruz
RP - NYY
|
|
514.
Kyle Freeland
SP - COL
|
|
515.
Hunter Harvey
RP - CHC
|
|
516.
Cole Henry
RP - WSH
|
|
517.
Brice Matthews
2B - HOU
|
|
518.
Sung-Mun Song
2B,3B - SD
|
|
519.
Joshua Baez
LF,CF,RF - STL
|
|
520.
Yoan Moncada
3B - LAA
|
|
521.
Jacob Latz
SP,RP - TEX
|
|
522.
Calvin Faucher
RP - MIA
|
|
523.
Ryan Weiss
SP - HOU
|
|
524.
Spencer Arrighetti
SP - HOU
|
|
525.
Miles Mikolas
SP - WSH
|
|
526.
Phil Maton
RP - CHC
|
|
527.
Michael Lorenzen
SP,RP - COL
|
|
528.
Tony Santillan
RP - CIN
|
|
529.
Lucas Giolito
SP - FA
|
|
530.
Dylan Lee
RP - ATL
|
|
531.
Sean Murphy
C - ATL
|
|
532.
Jose Quintana
SP - COL
|
|
533.
David Fry
DH - CLE
|
|
534.
Kris Bryant
DH - COL
|
|
535.
Jared Koenig
RP - MIL
|
|
536.
Drew Pomeranz
SP,RP - LAA
|
|
537.
Alexis Diaz
RP - TEX
|
|
538.
Jett Williams
2B,SS,OF - MIL
|
|
539.
Tyler Holton
SP,RP - DET
|
|
540.
Orion Kerkering
RP - PHI
|
|
541.
Bryan King
RP - HOU
|
|
542.
Hyeseong Kim
2B,SS,CF - LAD
|
|
543.
Masataka Yoshida
LF,DH - BOS
|
|
544.
Ryan Mountcastle
1B,DH - BAL
|
|
545.
Nathaniel Lowe
1B - CIN
|
|
546.
Angel Martinez
2B,LF,CF - CLE
|
|
547.
Dalton Rushing
C - LAD
|
|
548.
Gus Varland
RP - WSH
|
|
549.
Mauricio Dubon
2B,3B,SS,LF,CF - ATL
|
|
550.
Edouard Julien
1B,2B - COL
|
|
551.
Louis Varland
RP - TOR
|
|
552.
Miguel Amaya
C - CHC
|
|
553.
Dean Kremer
SP - BAL
|
|
554.
Tyler Rogers
RP - TOR
|
|
555.
Luke Raley
1B,LF,CF,RF - SEA
|
|
556.
Caleb Thielbar
RP - CHC
|
|
557.
Charlie Condon
1B,OF - COL
|
|
558.
Brad Keller
RP - PHI
|
|
559.
Davis Schneider
2B,LF - TOR
|
|
560.
Zack Gelof
2B - ATH
|
|
561.
Adael Amador
2B - COL
|
|
562.
Bryce Elder
SP - ATL
|
|
563.
Bryan Baker
RP - TB
|
|
564.
Eduard Bazardo
RP - SEA
|
|
565.
Lance McCullers Jr.
SP - HOU
|
|
566.
Yimi Garcia
RP - TOR
|
|
567.
Kyle Karros
3B - COL
|
|
568.
A.J. Minter
RP - NYM
|
|
569.
Gavin Lux
2B,3B,LF,DH - TB
|
|
570.
Tim Tawa
1B,2B,LF,CF - ARI
|
|
571.
Janson Junk
SP,RP - MIA
|
|
572.
Christopher Morel
LF - MIA
|
|
573.
Christian Encarnacion-Strand
1B,3B - CIN
|
|
574.
Jacob Young
CF - WSH
|
|
575.
Aaron Ashby
RP - MIL
|
|
576.
Brad Lord
SP,RP - WSH
|
|
577.
Steven Okert
RP - HOU
|
|
578.
Chris Paddack
SP,RP - MIA
|
|
579.
Jonah Heim
C,DH - ATL
|
|
580.
Drew Anderson
RP - DET
|
|
581.
Brooks Raley
RP - NYM
|
|
582.
Aaron Civale
SP,RP - ATH
|
|
583.
Ryan Thompson
RP - ARI
|
|
584.
Kristian Campbell
2B,CF - BOS
|
|
585.
Keegan Akin
SP,RP - BAL
|
|
586.
Max Clark
CF - DET
|
|
587.
Jason Adam
RP - SD
|
|
588.
Braydon Fisher
RP - TOR
|
|
589.
Justin Slaten
RP - BOS
|
|
590.
Tyler Wells
SP - BAL
|
|
591.
Robert Gasser
SP - MIL
|
|
592.
Joe Boyle
SP,RP - TB
|
|
593.
A.J. Puk
RP - ARI
|
|
594.
Andrew Nardi
RP - MIA
|
|
595.
Pedro Pages
C - STL
|
|
596.
Troy Melton
SP,RP - DET
|
|
597.
Bennett Sousa
RP - HOU
|
|
598.
Erik Miller
RP - SF
|
|
599.
Tanner Banks
RP - PHI
|
|
600.
Brandon Williamson
SP - CIN
|
|
601.
Troy Johnston
1B,LF,RF - COL
|
|
602.
Aaron Bummer
RP - ATL
|
|
603.
Tyler Freeman
2B,RF,DH - COL
|
|
604.
Angel Zerpa
RP - MIL
|
|
605.
Spencer Jones
CF - NYY
|
|
606.
Liam Hendriks
RP - FA
|
|
607.
Brooks Baldwin
2B,3B,SS,LF,CF,RF - CWS
|
|
608.
Zach Cole
LF,CF,RF - HOU
|
|
609.
Kyle Higashioka
C,DH - TEX
|
|
610.
Brant Hurter
SP,RP - DET
|
|
611.
Graham Ashcraft
RP - CIN
|
|
612.
Anthony Bender
RP - MIA
|
|
613.
Zac Veen
LF,RF - COL
|
|
614.
Joey Loperfido
LF,CF,RF - HOU
|
|
615.
Liam Hicks
C,1B,DH - MIA
|
|
616.
Javier Sanoja
2B,3B,SS,LF,CF - MIA
|
|
617.
Blake Treinen
RP - LAD
|
|
618.
Richard Fitts
SP - STL
|
|
619.
Aidan Miller
SS - PHI
|
|
620.
Kutter Crawford
SP - BOS
|
|
621.
Erik Sabrowski
RP - CLE
|
|
622.
Isiah Kiner-Falefa
2B,3B,SS - BOS
|
|
623.
Cody Bradford
SP - TEX
|
|
624.
Thomas Saggese
2B,3B,SS - STL
|
|
625.
Kody Funderburk
RP - MIN
|
|
626.
Luis Garcia
RP - NYM
|
|
627.
Edmundo Sosa
2B,3B,SS - PHI
|
|
628.
Blaze Alexander
2B,3B - BAL
|
|
629.
Casey Schmitt
1B,2B,3B - SF
|
|
630.
Miguel Rojas
2B,3B,SS - LAD
|
|
631.
Tyler Kinley
RP - ATL
|
|
632.
Will Benson
LF,CF,RF - CIN
|
|
633.
Davis Martin
SP - CWS
|
|
634.
Ronny Mauricio
2B,3B - NYM
|
|
635.
Nelson Velazquez
LF,RF,DH - STL
|
|
636.
Joey Bart
C - PIT
|
|
637.
CJ Kayfus
1B,LF,RF - CLE
|
|
638.
Corbin Burnes
SP - ARI
|
|
639.
Thomas White
SP - MIA
|
|
640.
Walker Jenkins
CF - MIN
|
|
641.
Zach Agnos
RP - COL
|
|
642.
Justin Topa
RP - MIN
|
|
643.
Chase Dollander
SP - COL
|
|
644.
Shelby Miller
RP - CHC
|
|
645.
Colin Rea
SP,RP - CHC
|
|
646.
Nathan Lukes
LF,CF,RF - TOR
|
|
647.
Jakob Junis
RP - TEX
|
|
648.
Jhostynxon Garcia
CF,RF - PIT
|
|
649.
Austin Martin
2B,LF,CF - MIN
|
|
650.
Ryan Johnson
RP - LAA
|
|
651.
Jake Fraley
LF,RF - TB
|
|
652.
Yennier Cano
RP - BAL
|
|
653.
German Marquez
SP - SD
|
|
654.
Matt Festa
RP - CLE
|
|
655.
Jake Bauers
1B,LF,RF - MIL
|
|
656.
Griffin Conine
LF,RF - MIA
|
|
657.
Jack Dreyer
SP,RP - LAD
|
|
658.
Jose Butto
SP,RP - SF
|
|
659.
Pierce Johnson
RP - CIN
|
|
660.
Scott Barlow
RP - ATH
|
|
661.
Ryne Stanek
RP - STL
|
|
662.
PJ Poulin
RP - WSH
|
|
663.
Henry Davis
C - PIT
|
|
664.
Matt Vierling
LF,CF - DET
|
|
665.
Hoby Milner
RP - CHC
|
|
666.
Trevor McDonald
SP,RP - SF
|
|
667.
Danny Coulombe
RP - BOS
|
|
668.
Tommy Nance
RP - TOR
|
|
669.
Elvis Alvarado
RP - ATH
|
|
670.
Tim Herrin
RP - CLE
|
|
671.
Andre Pallante
SP - STL
|
|
672.
Brendon Little
RP - TOR
|
|
673.
Carlos Lagrange
SP - NYY
|
|
674.
Joe Mack
C - MIA
|
|
675.
Tobias Myers
SP,RP - NYM
|
|
676.
Hagen Smith
SP - CWS
|
|
677.
Greg Weissert
RP - BOS
|
|
678.
J.T. Ginn
SP,RP - ATH
|
|
679.
Brusdar Graterol
RP - LAD
|
|
680.
Nathan Church
LF,CF,RF - STL
|
|
681.
Cole Sulser
RP - TB
|
|
682.
Christian Scott
SP - NYM
|
|
683.
Carlos Santana
1B - ARI
|
|
684.
Wandy Peralta
RP - SD
|
|
685.
Cole Winn
RP - TEX
|
|
686.
Mason Montgomery
RP - PIT
|
|
687.
John Schreiber
RP - KC
|
|
688.
Nick Fortes
C - TB
|
|
689.
Jake Irvin
SP - WSH
|
|
690.
Isaac Mattson
RP - PIT
|
|
691.
George Klassen
SP - LAA
|
|
692.
Mason Englert
RP - TB
|
|
693.
George Valera
LF,RF,DH - CLE
|
|
694.
Graham Pauley
3B - MIA
|
|
695.
Jalen Beeks
RP - TEX
|
|
696.
David Festa
SP - MIN
|
|
697.
David Hamilton
2B,SS - MIL
|
|
698.
Yoendrys Gomez
SP,RP - TB
|
|
699.
Esteury Ruiz
LF,CF - MIA
|
|
700.
Brent Headrick
RP - NYY
|
|
701.
Justin Lawrence
RP - PIT
|
|
702.
Jack Perkins
RP - ATH
|
|
703.
Nick Mears
RP - KC
|
|
704.
Brandon Lockridge
LF,CF,RF - MIL
|
|
705.
Sean Newcomb
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
706.
Griffin Canning
SP - SD
|
|
707.
Heriberto Hernandez
LF,RF,DH - MIA
|
|
708.
Taijuan Walker
SP,RP - PHI
|
|
709.
Amed Rosario
2B,3B - NYY
|
|
710.
Connor Phillips
RP - CIN
|
|
711.
Kevin Kelly
RP - TB
|
|
712.
Brock Burke
RP - CIN
|
|
713.
Greg Bird
1B - FA
|
|
714.
Emmanuel Rodriguez
CF - MIN
|
|
715.
Jacob Webb
RP - CHC
|
|
716.
Jonny DeLuca
LF,CF,RF - TB
|
|
717.
Jerar Encarnacion
RF - SF
|
|
718.
Josh White
RP - MIA
|
|
719.
Luis Torrens
C - NYM
|
|
720.
Colby Thomas
LF,CF,RF - ATH
|
|
721.
Enyel De Los Santos
RP - HOU
|
|
722.
Carter Baumler
SP,RP - TEX
|
|
723.
Jonathan Bowlan
RP - PHI
|
|
724.
Ben Williamson
3B - TB
|
|
725.
Ryan Ritter
2B,SS - COL
|
|
726.
Gary Sanchez
C - MIL
|
|
727.
Mason Fluharty
RP - TOR
|
|
728.
Leo De Vries
SS - ATH
|
|
729.
Walbert Urena
SP - LAA
|
|
730.
Cade Povich
SP - BAL
|
|
731.
Sam Hentges
RP - SF
|
|
732.
Michael Conforto
LF - CHC
|
|
733.
Jonathan Loaisiga
RP - ARI
|
|
734.
Jovani Moran
RP - BOS
|
|
735.
Daniel Schneemann
2B,3B,SS,CF,RF - CLE
|
|
736.
Jose Urquidy
RP - PIT
|
|
737.
David Morgan
RP - SD
|
|
738.
Ryan Yarbrough
SP,RP - NYY
|
|
739.
Elmer Rodriguez
SP - NYY
|
|
740.
Joel Payamps
RP - ATL
|
|
741.
Hector Rodriguez
LF,RF - CIN
|
|
742.
Ricky Tiedemann
SP - TOR
|
|
743.
JJ Bleday
LF,CF,RF - CIN
|
|
744.
Sam Bachman
RP - LAA
|
|
745.
Dietrich Enns
SP,RP - BAL
|
|
746.
JP Sears
SP - SD
|
|
747.
Rob Zastryzny
RP - MIL
|
|
748.
Quinn Mathews
SP - STL
|
|
749.
Bradgley Rodriguez
RP - SD
|
|
750.
Wilmer Flores
1B,DH - FA
|
|
751.
Adbert Alzolay
RP - NYM
|
|
752.
Jose Suarez
RP - ATL
|
|
753.
Matt Gage
RP - SF
|
|
754.
Huascar Brazoban
SP,RP - NYM
|
|
755.
Evan Phillips
RP - LAD
|
|
756.
Brock Stewart
RP - LAD
|
|
757.
Adam Frazier
2B,LF,RF - LAA
|
|
758.
Andre Granillo
RP - WSH
|
|
759.
Keaton Winn
SP,RP - SF
|
|
760.
James Outman
LF,CF,RF - MIN
|
|
761.
Julian Fernandez
RP - WSH
|
|
762.
Kade Anderson
SP - SEA
|
|
763.
Grant Anderson
RP - MIL
|
|
764.
Connor Wong
C - BOS
|
|
765.
Austin Warren
RP - NYM
|
|
766.
Brandon Eisert
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
767.
DL Hall
SP,RP - MIL
|
|
768.
Michael Kopech
RP - FA
|
|
769.
Taylor Clarke
RP - ARI
|
|
770.
Hayden Harris
RP - ATL
|
|
771.
Josh Sborz
RP - TEX
|
|
772.
Alex Freeland
3B,SS - LAD
|
|
773.
Justin Martinez
RP - ARI
|
|
774.
Patrick Sandoval
SP - BOS
|
|
775.
Caleb Ferguson
RP - CIN
|
|
776.
Cooper Criswell
RP - SEA
|
|
777.
Javier Assad
SP - CHC
|
|
778.
Casey Legumina
RP - SEA
|
|
779.
Sawyer Gipson-Long
SP,RP - DET
|
|
780.
Lake Bachar
RP - MIA
|
|
781.
Hunter Bigge
RP - TB
|
|
782.
Luinder Avila
RP - KC
|
|
783.
Michael Massey
2B,LF - KC
|
|
784.
Jesus Made
2B,3B,SS - MIL
|
|
785.
Brenan Hanifee
RP - DET
|
|
786.
Mitch Garver
C,DH - SEA
|
|
787.
Dauri Moreta
RP - FA
|
|
788.
Ty France
1B - SD
|
|
789.
Jorge Mateo
2B,SS,CF - ATL
|
|
790.
Ryan Zeferjahn
RP - LAA
|
|
791.
Anthony Banda
RP - MIN
|
|
792.
Oswald Peraza
1B,2B,3B,SS - LAA
|
|
793.
Jose Trevino
C - CIN
|
|
794.
Otto Kemp
1B,3B,LF - PHI
|
|
795.
Starling Marte
LF,RF,DH - KC
|
|
796.
AJ Blubaugh
SP,RP - HOU
|
|
797.
Clarke Schmidt
SP - NYY
|
|
798.
Ben Casparius
SP,RP - LAD
|
|
799.
Robert Hassell III
CF,RF - WSH
|
|
800.
Craig Yoho
RP - MIL
|
|
801.
Ryan Fernandez
RP - STL
|
|
802.
Jeremiah Jackson
3B,RF - BAL
|
|
803.
Noah Schultz
SP - CWS
|
|
804.
Ryan Brasier
RP - TEX
|
|
805.
Dylan Moore
1B,2B,3B,LF,RF - PHI
|
|
806.
Hunter Dobbins
SP - STL
|
|
807.
Jimmy Crooks III
C - STL
|
|
808.
James McCann
C - ARI
|
|
809.
Gage Jump
SP - ATH
|
|
810.
Yuki Matsui
RP - SD
|
|
811.
Michael Kelly
RP - ATH
|
|
812.
Curtis Mead
1B,2B,3B - WSH
|
|
813.
Yohan Ramirez
RP - PIT
|
|
814.
Daniel Susac
C - SF
|
|
815.
Ryan Bergert
SP - KC
|
|
816.
Tyler Alexander
SP,RP - TEX
|
|
817.
Caleb Kilian
SP,RP - SF
|
|
818.
Ezequiel Duran
1B,2B,3B,SS,LF - TEX
|
|
819.
Travis d'Arnaud
C - LAA
|
|
820.
Stephen Kolek
SP - KC
|
|
821.
DJ Herz
SP - WSH
|
|
822.
Colin Selby
RP - BAL
|
|
823.
Sam Antonacci
2B,3B - CWS
|
|
824.
Santiago Espinal
2B,3B,LF,RF - LAD
|
|
825.
Justin Bruihl
RP - STL
|
|
826.
Ryan Ward
1B,LF,RF - LAD
|
|
827.
Chase Silseth
RP - LAA
|
|
828.
Max Kepler
LF,RF - FA
|
|
829.
Tyler Heineman
C - TOR
|
|
830.
Ryan Borucki
RP - SF
|
|
831.
Taylor Walls
SS - TB
|
|
832.
Logan Allen
RP - LAD
|
|
833.
Alex Cobb
SP - FA
|
|
834.
Edgardo Henriquez
RP - LAD
|
|
835.
Paul Blackburn
SP,RP - NYY
|
|
836.
Jaxon Wiggins
SP - CHC
|
|
837.
Ian Hamilton
RP - ATL
|
|
838.
Shane Drohan
SP - MIL
|
|
839.
Drew Smith
RP - MIN
|
|
840.
Sebastian Walcott
3B,SS - TEX
|
|
841.
Jeferson Quero
C - MIL
|
|
842.
Spencer Bivens
RP - SF
|
|
843.
Braden Montgomery
CF - CWS
|
|
844.
Jimmy Herget
RP - COL
|
|
845.
Justin Wilson
RP - FA
|
|
846.
Carlos Vargas
RP - SEA
|
|
847.
Tim Hill
RP - NYY
|
|
848.
Drey Jameson
RP - ARI
|
|
849.
Hayden Wesneski
SP - HOU
|
|
850.
Cade Gibson
RP - MIA
|
|
851.
Richie Palacios
IF,2B,LF - TB
|
|
852.
Jesse Winker
LF,RF,DH - FA
|
|
853.
Dominic Smith
1B - ATL
|
|
854.
Sam Moll
RP - CIN
|
|
855.
Erick Fedde
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
856.
Nolan Jones
LF,CF,RF - CLE
|
|
857.
Tomoyuki Sugano
SP - COL
|
|
858.
Coleman Crow
SP - MIL
|
|
859.
Ramon Urias
2B,3B - STL
|
|
860.
Daniel Lynch
RP - KC
|
|
861.
Juan Mejia
RP - COL
|
|
862.
Andrew Hoffmann
RP - ARI
|
|
863.
Tanner McDougal
SP - CWS
|
|
864.
Porter Hodge
RP - CHC
|
|
865.
Andrew Chafin
RP - CIN
|
|
866.
Eric Wagaman
1B,LF - MIN
|
|
867.
Vaughn Grissom
2B - LAA
|
|
868.
Matt Pushard
RP - STL
|
|
869.
Alex Lange
RP - KC
|
|
870.
Michael Toglia
1B - CIN
|
|
871.
Nick Raquet
RP - STL
|
|
872.
Alan Roden
LF,RF - MIN
|
|
873.
Ron Marinaccio
RP - SD
|
|
874.
Henry Bolte
RF - ATH
|
|
875.
Brady Basso
RP - ATH
|
|
876.
Will Klein
RP - LAD
|
|
877.
Kyle Hurt
RP - LAD
|
|
878.
Jose Leclerc
RP - SD
|
|
879.
JT Brubaker
RP - SF
|
|
880.
Connor Prielipp
SP - MIN
|
|
881.
Andrew Fischer
3B - MIL
|
|
882.
Adrian Del Castillo
C,DH - ARI
|
|
883.
Kaelen Culpepper
SS - MIN
|
|
884.
Yohel Pozo
C - STL
|
|
885.
Chris Murphy
RP - CWS
|
|
886.
Ryan Sloan
SP - SEA
|
|
887.
Zack Kelly
SP,RP - BOS
|
|
888.
Austin Wynns
C - ATH
|
|
889.
Bryan Hudson
RP - CWS
|
|
890.
Andrew McCutchen
RF,DH - TEX
|
|
891.
Braxton Fulford
C - COL
|
|
892.
Cooper Ingle
C - CLE
|
|
893.
Tyler Phillips
RP - MIA
|
|
894.
Luis Matos
LF,CF,RF - MIL
|
|
895.
Trey Gibson
SP - BAL
|
|
896.
Blaine Crim
1B - COL
|
|
897.
Enrique Hernandez
1B,2B,3B,LF - LAD
|
|
898.
Felix Bautista
RP - BAL
|
|
899.
Eric Orze
RP - MIN
|
|
900.
Kai-Wei Teng
SP,RP - HOU
|
|
901.
Jack Kochanowicz
SP - LAA
|
|
902.
Tyler Ferguson
RP - ATH
|
|
903.
Kyle Hart
SP,RP - SD
|
|
904.
Chase Lee
RP - TOR
|
|
905.
Drew Gilbert
CF,RF - SF
|
|
906.
Patrick Corbin
SP - FA
|
|
907.
Jason Foley
RP - SF
|
|
908.
Joe Jimenez
RP - ATL
|
|
909.
Gregory Santos
RP - SF
|
|
910.
Darell Hernaiz
2B,3B,SS - ATH
|
|
911.
Dylan Dodd
RP - ATL
|
|
912.
Cody Laweryson
RP - MIN
|
|
913.
Yosver Zulueta
RP - SEA
|
|
914.
Tyler Black
1B - MIL
|
|
915.
Luke Jackson
RP - FA
|
|
916.
Carson Whisenhunt
SP - SF
|
|
917.
Gordon Graceffo
RP - STL
|
|
918.
Endy Rodriguez
C,1B - PIT
|
|
919.
Yaramil Hiraldo
RP - BAL
|
|
920.
Warming Bernabel
1B - FA
|
|
921.
Codi Heuer
RP - CLE
|
|
922.
Nelson Rada
CF - LAA
|
|
923.
Garrett Hawkins
RP - SD
|
|
924.
Jarlin Susana
SP - WSH
|
|
925.
Alejandro Osuna
LF,CF,RF - TEX
|
|
926.
Yariel Rodriguez
RP - TOR
|
|
927.
Luis Campusano
C,DH - SD
|
|
928.
Steven Cruz
RP - KC
|
|
929.
Richard Lovelady
RP - NYM
|
|
930.
George Lombard
2B,3B,SS - NYY
|
|
931.
Justin Hagenman
RP - NYM
|
|
932.
Easton McGee
RP - MIL
|
|
933.
Thairo Estrada
2B - FA
|
|
934.
Anthony Nunez
RP - BAL
|
|
935.
Eli White
LF,CF,RF - ATL
|
|
936.
Luke Little
RP - CHC
|
|
937.
Kevin Alcantara
CF,RF - CHC
|
|
938.
Tristan Beck
RP - SF
|
|
939.
Ronel Blanco
SP - HOU
|
|
940.
Brody Hopkins
SP - TB
|
|
941.
Kade Strowd
RP - ARI
|
|
942.
Tommy Pham
LF,CF,RF - NYM
|
|
943.
Kyle Backhus
RP - PHI
|
|
944.
Heston Kjerstad
LF,RF - BAL
|
|
945.
Andruw Monasterio
1B,2B,3B,SS - BOS
|
|
946.
Nick Yorke
2B - PIT
|
|
947.
Andrew Alvarez
SP - WSH
|
|
948.
Konnor Pilkington
RP - DET
|
|
949.
Jack Wenninger
SP - NYM
|
|
950.
Ryan Clifford
1B,OF - NYM
|
|
951.
Dane Myers
LF,CF,RF - CIN
|
|
952.
Andrew Walters
RP - CLE
|
|
953.
Ethan Roberts
RP - CHC
|
|
954.
Colton Gordon
SP,RP - HOU
|
|
955.
Rafael Marchan
C - PHI
|
|
956.
Evan Sisk
RP - PIT
|
|
957.
Tyler Fitzgerald
2B - SF
|
|
958.
Grant Wolfram
RP - BAL
|
|
959.
Gavin Stone
SP - LAD
|
|
960.
Andres Chaparro
1B - WSH
|
|
961.
Craig Kimbrel
RP - NYM
|
|
962.
Alek Manoah
SP - LAA
|
|
963.
Jordan Wicks
SP,RP - CHC
|
|
964.
Rowdy Tellez
1B - ATL
|
|
965.
James McArthur
RP - KC
|
|
966.
Jordan Hicks
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
967.
Jahmai Jones
LF,CF,RF,DH - DET
|
|
968.
Brent Suter
SP,RP - LAA
|
|
969.
Joel Peguero
RP - SF
|
|
970.
Enrique Bradfield Jr.
CF - BAL
|
|
971.
Zak Kent
RP - MIN
|
|
972.
Jesus Rodriguez
C - SF
|
|
973.
Andrew Morris
SP - MIN
|
|
974.
Rob Refsnyder
LF,CF,RF,DH - SEA
|
|
975.
Luis Gastelum
RP - STL
|
|
976.
Bailey Falter
SP - KC
|
|
977.
Rece Hinds
RF - CIN
|
|
978.
Ty Johnson
SP,RP - TB
|
|
979.
Josiah Gray
SP - WSH
|
|
980.
Randal Grichuk
LF,RF,DH - NYY
|
|
981.
Colin Holderman
RP - CLE
|
|
982.
Dylan Smith
RP - SF
|
|
983.
Abimelec Ortiz
1B,OF - WSH
|
|
984.
Yerry De los Santos
RP - NYY
|
|
985.
Reiver Sanmartin
RP - SF
|
|
986.
Nick Sandlin
RP - LAA
|
|
987.
Liam Doyle
SP - STL
|
|
988.
John Brebbia
RP - MIN
|
|
989.
Andrew Knizner
C - COL
|
|
990.
Kervin Castro
RP - NYY
|
|
991.
Leo Rivas
2B,SS - SEA
|
|
992.
Philip Abner
RP - ARI
|
|
993.
Jaden Hill
RP - COL
|
|
994.
Brandyn Garcia
RP - ARI
|
|
995.
Jeimer Candelario
1B,3B - LAA
|
|
996.
Jose Corniell
SP,RP - TEX
|
|
997.
Kendry Rojas
SP - MIN
|
|
998.
Jamie Arnold
SP - ATH
|
|
999.
Hunter Feduccia
C - TB
|
|
1000.
Peyton Gray
RP - TEX
|
|
1001.
Tyler Gilbert
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
1002.
Tyrone Taylor
LF,CF,RF - NYM
|
|
1003.
Hunter Stratton
RP - ATL
|
|
1004.
Jhonkensy Noel
1B,RF - BAL
|
|
1005.
Michael Fulmer
RP - SF
|
|
1006.
Mitchell Parker
SP - WSH
|
|
1007.
Manuel Rodriguez
RP - TB
|
|
1008.
Kaleb Ort
RP - LAA
|
|
1009.
Keider Montero
SP,RP - DET
|
|
1010.
Eloy Jimenez
RF,DH - TOR
|
|
1011.
Nestor Cortes Jr.
SP - FA
|
|
1012.
Ryan Watson
SP,RP - BOS
|
|
1013.
George Soriano
RP - STL
|
|
1014.
Elias Diaz
C - KC
|
|
1015.
Spencer Miles
SP - TOR
|
|
1016.
Charlie Morton
SP,RP - FA
|
|
1017.
Jordan Montgomery
SP - TEX
|
|
1018.
Brett Sullivan
C - COL
|
|
1019.
Carlos Rodriguez
RP - MIL
|
|
1020.
RJ Petit
RP - COL
|
|
1021.
Max Anderson
2B,3B - DET
|
|
1022.
Oswaldo Cabrera
3B - NYY
|
|
1023.
J.P. France
SP,RP - HOU
|
|
1024.
Hao-Yu Lee
2B,3B - DET
|
|
1025.
Cristian Mena
SP,RP - ARI
|
|
1026.
Ryan Bliss
2B - SEA
|
|
1027.
Josh Simpson
RP - SEA
|
|
1028.
Jesse Scholtens
SP,RP - TB
|
|
1029.
Nate Pearson
RP - HOU
|
|
1030.
Daysbel Hernandez
RP - ATL
|
|
1031.
Michael Tonkin
RP - FA
|
|
1032.
Max Lazar
RP - PHI
|
|
1033.
Jackson Jobe
SP,RP - DET
|
|
1034.
Brycen Mautz
SP - STL
|
|
1035.
Joe Mantiply
RP - TOR
|
|
1036.
Sammy Peralta
RP - MIL
|
|
1037.
Jose Iglesias
2B,3B,SS - FA
|
|
1038.
Luis Medina
SP - ATH
|
|
1039.
Nick Allen
SS - HOU
|
|
1040.
Paxton Schultz
RP - WSH
|
|
1041.
Chad Green
RP - FA
|
|
1042.
Steven Wilson
RP - TB
|
|
1043.
Daniel Espino
SP - CLE
|
|
1044.
Grant Holman
RP - LAD
|
|
1045.
Jonathon Long
1B - CHC
|
|
1046.
John King
RP - MIA
|
|
1047.
Bobby Bradley
1B - FA
|
|
1048.
Nick Burdi
RP - NYM
|
|
1049.
Will Brennan
LF,CF,RF - SF
|
|
1050.
Jhony Brito
RP - SD
|
|
1051.
Reese McGuire
C - CWS
|
|
1052.
Franco Aleman
RP - CLE
|
|
1053.
Myles Straw
LF,CF,RF - TOR
|
|
1054.
Trent Thornton
RP - CHC
|
|
1055.
Albert Suarez
SP,RP - BAL
|
|
1056.
Peyton Pallette
RP - CLE
|
|
1057.
Max Schuemann
2B,3B,SS,OF - NYY
|
|
1058.
Dylan Ross
RP - NYM
|
|
1059.
Chase Petty
SP - CIN
|
|
1060.
Luis Curvelo
RP - TEX
|
|
1061.
Jackson Rutledge
SP,RP - WSH
|
|
1062.
Ryan Lambert
RP - NYM
|
|
1063.
Dylan Carlson
LF,CF,RF - CHC
|
|
1064.
Robinson Ortiz
SP,RP - SEA
|
|
1065.
Alex Carrillo
RP - NYM
|
|
1066.
Austin Meadows
LF - FA
|
|
1067.
Jorge Lopez
RP - FA
|
|
1068.
J.C. Escarra
C - NYY
|
|
1069.
Michel Otanez
RP - TEX
|
|
1070.
Carlos Cortes
LF,RF - ATH
|
|
1071.
Hector Neris
RP - FA
|
|
1072.
Lazaro Estrada
SP,RP - TOR
|
|
1073.
Paul Gervase
RP - LAD
|
|
1074.
Josue Briceno
C,1B - DET
|
|
1075.
Sean Guenther
RP - DET
|
|
1076.
Connor Brogdon
RP - CLE
|
|
1077.
Jake Rogers
C - DET
|
|
1078.
Lucas Braun
SP - ATL
|
|
1079.
Chase Shugart
RP - PHI
|
|
1080.
Danny Young
RP - ATL
|
|
1081.
Jose Tena
2B,3B - WSH
|
|
1082.
Evan Reifert
RP - TB
|
|
1083.
Tim Mayza
RP - PHI
|
|
1084.
Jhancarlos Lara
SP,RP - ATL
|
|
1085.
Jake Bird
RP - NYY
|
|
1086.
John Klein
SP,RP - MIN
|
|
1087.
Jedixson Paez
SP - CWS
|
|
1088.
Kyle Nicolas
RP - CIN
|
|
1089.
Brennan Bernardino
SP,RP - COL
|
|
1090.
Trevor Stephan
RP - CLE
|
|
1091.
Derek Law
RP - ARI
|
|
1092.
Leonardo Bernal
C - STL
|
|
1093.
Jarred Kelenic
LF,CF,RF - CWS
|
|
1094.
Kohl Drake
SP - ARI
|
|
1095.
Korey Lee
C - CWS
|
|
1096.
Zach McCambley
SP,RP - MIA
|
|
1097.
Peter Lambert
SP,RP - HOU
|
|
1098.
Tyler Locklear
1B - ARI
|
|
1099.
Luis Perales
SP,RP - WSH
|
|
1100.
Deyvison De Los Santos
1B,3B - MIA
|
|
1101.
Cionel Perez
RP - WSH
|
|
1102.
James Karinchak
RP - ATL
|
|
1103.
Tyler Samaniego
RP - BOS
|
|
1104.
Kolby Allard
SP,RP - CLE
|
|
1105.
Miguel Ullola
SP,RP - HOU
|
|
1106.
Clayton Kershaw
SP - FA
|
|
1107.
Scott Alexander
RP - FA
|
|
1108.
Leandro Lopez
SP - TEX
|
|
1109.
Domingo Gonzalez
RP - SEA
|
|
1110.
Cameron Foster
RP - BAL
|
|
1111.
Brandon Walter
SP - HOU
|
|
1112.
Josue De Paula
LF - LAD
|
|
1113.
Kemp Alderman
RF - MIA
|
|
1114.
Riley Martin
RP - CHC
|
|
1115.
Rich Hill
SP,RP - FA
|
|
1116.
Carson Seymour
SP,RP - SF
|
|
1117.
Bailey Horn
RP - DET
|
|
1118.
Shay Whitcomb
2B,3B - HOU
|
|
1119.
Joel Kuhnel
RP - ATH
|
|
1120.
Brandon Waddell
RP - NYM
|
|
1121.
Joey Gerber
SP,RP - NYM
|
|
1122.
LuJames Groover
3B - ARI
|
|
1123.
Jace Jung
3B - DET
|
|
1124.
Ty Adcock
RP - SD
|
|
1125.
AJ Smith-Shawver
SP - ATL
|
|
1126.
Tyler Bremner
SP - LAA
|
|
1127.
Drew Sommers
RP - DET
|
|
1128.
Mitch Bratt
SP - ARI
|
|
1129.
David Sandlin
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
1130.
Cam Booser
RP - TB
|
|
1131.
Taylor Rashi
RP - ARI
|
|
1132.
Osvaldo Bido
SP,RP - ATL
|
|
1133.
Nacho Alvarez Jr.
3B - ATL
|
|
1134.
Austin Peterson
SP - CLE
|
|
1135.
Cole Wilcox
RP - SEA
|
|
1136.
Angel Bastardo
SP - BOS
|
|
1137.
Maximo Acosta
3B,SS - MIA
|
|
1138.
Eduarniel Nunez
RP - ATH
|
|
1139.
Joey Wiemer
LF,CF,RF - WSH
|
|
1140.
Jose Fermin
2B - STL
|
|
1141.
Mike Tauchman
LF,CF,RF - NYM
|
|
1142.
Rico Garcia
RP - BAL
|
|
1143.
Jonathan Pintaro
SP,RP - NYM
|
|
1144.
Jose Fernandez
1B,SS - ARI
|
|
1145.
Tyson Neighbors
RP - BAL
|
|
1146.
Blade Tidwell
SP,RP - SF
|
|
1147.
Trey Sweeney
SS - DET
|
|
1148.
Ryan Gusto
SP,RP - MIA
|
|
1149.
Jacob Reimer
1B,3B - NYM
|
|
1150.
Jose Miranda
1B,3B - SD
|
|
1151.
Tate Kuehner
SP - MIL
|
|
1152.
David Price
SP,RP - FA
|
|
1153.
Pedro Avila
RP - CLE
|
|
1154.
Justin Foscue
1B - TEX
|
|
1155.
Tony Gonsolin
SP - FA
|
|
1156.
Leody Taveras
CF,RF - BAL
|
|
1157.
Beau Brieske
RP - DET
|
|
1158.
Dane Dunning
SP,RP - SEA
|
|
1159.
Dedniel Nunez
RP - NYM
|
|
1160.
Brandon Young
SP - BAL
|
|
1161.
Tommy Kahnle
RP - BOS
|
|
1162.
Jake Bennett
SP - BOS
|
|
1163.
Joe Rock
SP,RP - TB
|
|
1164.
Michael Petersen
RP - MIA
|
|
1165.
Nick Anderson
RP - ATH
|
|
1166.
Angel Perdomo
RP - LAA
|
|
1167.
Shane Murphy
RP - CWS
|
|
1168.
Miguel Castro
RP - LAA
|
|
1169.
Scott Effross
RP - DET
|
|
1170.
Nolan Hoffman
SP,RP - PHI
|
|
1171.
Ronan Kopp
SP,RP - LAD
|
|
1172.
Jorge Alcala
RP - FA
|
|
1173.
Garrett Acton
RP - MIN
|
|
1174.
Duncan Davitt
SP - CWS
|
|
1175.
Ty Madden
RP - DET
|
|
1176.
Jon Gray
RP - FA
|
|
1177.
Jose Espada
RP - BAL
|
|
1178.
Jake Cousins
RP - LAD
|
|
1179.
Trent Harris
RP - SF
|
|
1180.
A.J. Causey
RP - ATH
|
|
1181.
Roddery Munoz
RP - HOU
|
|
1182.
Daniel Robert
RP - PHI
|
|
1183.
Griff McGarry
SP - PHI
|
|
1184.
Riley Gowens
SP - CWS
|
|
1185.
Tylor Megill
SP - NYM
|
|
1186.
Rafael Montero
RP - NYY
|
|
1187.
Packy Naughton
SP,RP - STL
|
|
1188.
Jake Bloss
SP - TOR
|
|
1189.
Wilber Dotel
SP - PIT
|
|
1190.
Sauryn Lao
RP - FA
|
|
1191.
Collin Snider
RP - CHC
|
|
1192.
Joey Lucchesi
RP - LAA
|
|
1193.
Francis Pena
RP - SD
|
|
1194.
Juan Montes
OF - FA
|
|
1195.
Tayler Saucedo
RP - LAA
|
|
1196.
Jayden Murray
RP - HOU
|
|
1197.
Alan Rangel
SP,RP - PHI
|
|
1198.
Jose Franco
SP,RP - CIN
|
|
1199.
Angel Chivilli
RP - NYY
|
|
1200.
Bowden Francis
SP - TOR
|
|
1201.
Henry Baez
SP - ATH
|
|
1202.
Julian Merryweather
RP - MIN
|
|
1203.
Eli Morgan
RP - KC
|
|
1204.
Gavin Hollowell
RP - CHC
|
|
1205.
Mitch Spence
SP,RP - KC
|
|
1206.
Jack Neely
RP - CHC
|
|
1207.
Chris Devenski
RP - PIT
|
|
1208.
Drew Thorpe
SP - CWS
|
|
1209.
Zach Pop
RP - PHI
|
|
1210.
Jeff Criswell
RP - COL
|
|
1211.
Christian Roa
RP - HOU
|
|
1212.
Emiliano Teodo
RP - TEX
|
|
1213.
Tom Cosgrove
RP - HOU
|
|
1214.
Cade Winquest
SP - NYY
|
|
1215.
Kevin Herget
RP - NYM
|
|
1216.
Randy Dobnak
RP - SEA
|
|
1217.
Tyler Mattison
RP - DET
|
|
1218.
Mike Vasil
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
1219.
Jake Miller
SP - CLE
|
|
1220.
Jake Woodford
RP - MIL
|
|
1221.
Trevor Williams
SP - WSH
|
|
1222.
Chen Zhong-Ao Zhuang
SP - ATH
|
|
1223.
Triston McKenzie
SP,RP - SD
|
|
1224.
Troy Taylor
RP - SEA
|
|
1225.
Colin Poche
RP - FA
|
|
1226.
Dax Fulton
SP - MIA
|
|
1227.
Isaiah Campbell
RP - ARI
|
|
1228.
Daison Acosta
RP - SD
|
|
1229.
Corbin Martin
RP - CHC
|
|
1230.
Adam Macko
SP,RP - TOR
|
|
1231.
Juan Burgos
RP - ARI
|
|
1232.
Joe Ross
RP - ARI
|
|
1233.
Lou Trivino
RP - PHI
|
|
1234.
Dom Hamel
SP,RP - NYY
|
|
1235.
Ryan Loutos
RP - FA
|
|
1236.
Jason Alexander
SP,RP - HOU
|
|
1237.
Joey Estes
SP - ATH
|
|
1238.
Tink Hence
SP - STL
|
|
1239.
Grant Hartwig
RP - MIN
|
|
1240.
Jhonathan Diaz
RP - SEA
|
|
1241.
Welinton Herrera
RP - COL
|
|
1242.
Tucker Davidson
RP - PHI
|
|
1243.
Jake Eder
RP - LAD
|
|
1244.
Eric Cerantola
RP - KC
|
|
1245.
K.C. Hunt
SP - TB
|
|
1246.
Zach Franklin
RP - CWS
|
|
1247.
Josh Staumont
RP - CIN
|
|
1248.
Bryan Hoeing
RP - SD
|
|
1249.
Alex Hoppe
RP - SEA
|
|
1250.
Josh Fleming
SP,RP - TOR
|
|
1251.
Sam Benschoter
RP - CIN
|
|
1252.
Ben Bowden
RP - ATH
|
|
1253.
Andrew Sears
SP - DET
|
|
1254.
Scott Blewett
RP - STL
|
|
1255.
Alek Jacob
RP - SD
|
|
1256.
Carlos Hernandez
RP - CLE
|
|
1257.
Nabil Crismatt
SP,RP - TEX
|
|
1258.
Luis Mey
RP - CIN
|
|
1259.
Joe Elbis
SP - FA
|
|
1260.
Kyle Wright
SP - CHC
|
|
1261.
Prelander Berroa
RP - CWS
|
|
1262.
Tyler Schweitzer
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
1263.
Seth Martinez
RP - BOS
|
|
1264.
Shawn Dubin
RP - ARI
|
|
1265.
Brandan Bidois
RP - PIT
|
|
1266.
Vince Velasquez
SP - CHC
|
|
1267.
Guillo Zuniga
RP - FA
|
|
1268.
Thomas Harrington
SP,RP - PIT
|
|
1269.
Shinnosuke Ogasawara
SP,RP - WSH
|
|
1270.
Trenton Denholm
RP - CLE
|
|
1271.
Austin Voth
RP - TOR
|
|
1272.
Joe La Sorsa
RP - PIT
|
|
1273.
Ryder Ryan
RP - LAD
|
|
1274.
Marco Raya
SP,RP - MIN
|
|
1275.
Tanner Houck
SP - BOS
|
|
1276.
Josh Ekness
RP - MIA
|
|
1277.
Tyler Uberstine
SP - BOS
|
|
1278.
Genesis Cabrera
RP - PHI
|
|
1279.
Blake Walston
RP - ARI
|
|
1280.
Michael Darrell-Hicks
RP - PIT
|
|
1281.
Rolddy Munoz
RP - ATL
|
|
1282.
Yovanny Cruz
SP - NYY
|
|
1283.
Chris Roycroft
RP - STL
|
|
1284.
Logan Gillaspie
RP - SD
|
|
1285.
Travis Adams
SP,RP - MIN
|
|
1286.
Blas Castano
SP,RP - SEA
|
|
1287.
Keegan Thompson
RP - COL
|
|
1288.
Landon Knack
SP - LAD
|
|
1289.
Tyson Miller
RP - CWS
|
|
1290.
Zach Brzykcy
RP - MIA
|
|
1291.
Dylan Coleman
RP - NYY
|
|
1292.
Yunior Marte
RP - CIN
|
|
1293.
Austin Love
SP - STL
|
|
1294.
Ryan Webb
RP - FA
|
|
1295.
Zach Maxwell
RP - CIN
|
|
1296.
Bobby Miller
SP - LAD
|
|
1297.
Zach Penrod
RP - WSH
|
|
1298.
Wade Miley
SP - FA
|
|
1299.
Ben Lively
SP - CLE
|
|
1300.
Jackson Wolf
SP - SD
|
|
1301.
Jayvien Sandridge
RP - BAL
|
|
1302.
T.J. McFarland
RP - FA
|
|
1303.
Alexander Alberto
RP - TB
|
|
1304.
Chayce McDermott
SP,RP - BAL
|
|
1305.
Doug Nikhazy
SP,RP - CLE
|
|
1306.
Tanner Rainey
RP - DET
|
|
1307.
Matt Waldron
SP - SD
|
|
1308.
Mason Thompson
RP - TEX
|
|
1309.
Juan Morillo
RP - ARI
|
|
1310.
Jaden Woods
RP - PIT
|
|
1311.
Gunnar Hoglund
SP - ATH
|
|
1312.
Dale Stanavich
RP - FA
|
|
1313.
Ken Waldichuk
SP - WSH
|
|
1314.
Pete Hansen
SP - STL
|
|
1315.
Robby Ahlstrom
RP - TEX
|
|
1316.
Julian Aguiar
SP - CIN
|
|
1317.
Luis Guerrero
RP - TB
|
|
1318.
Marco Gonzales
SP - SD
|
|
1319.
Jackson Kowar
RP - BAL
|
|
1320.
Dylan Ray
SP - ARI
|
|
1321.
Marc Church
RP - TEX
|
|
1322.
Will Johnston
SP,RP - ATH
|
|
1323.
Bryce Jarvis
RP - ARI
|
|
1324.
Shaun Anderson
RP - LAA
|
|
1325.
Eric Torres
RP - BAL
|
|
1326.
Martin Perez
SP - ATL
|
|
1327.
Connor Seabold
RP - DET
|
|
1328.
William Kempner
RP - MIA
|
|
1329.
Ben Kudrna
SP - KC
|
|
1330.
Kendall Graveman
RP - FA
|
|
1331.
Mike Clevinger
RP - PIT
|
|
1332.
Jairo Iriarte
RP - CWS
|
|
1333.
Karson Milbrandt
SP - MIA
|
|
1334.
Carson Spiers
SP,RP - CIN
|
|
1335.
Yoniel Curet
SP - PHI
|
|
1336.
Lyon Richardson
RP - CIN
|
|
1337.
Tejay Antone
SP,RP - CIN
|
|
1338.
Ryan Rolison
RP - CHC
|
|
1339.
Seth Johnson
SP,RP - PHI
|
|
1340.
Bryse Wilson
SP,RP - PHI
|
|
1341.
Gavin Collyer
RP - TEX
|
|
1342.
Joel Hurtado
SP - LAA
|
|
1343.
Anthony Molina
RP - ATL
|
|
1344.
Sean Sullivan
SP - PIT
|
|
1345.
Mitch Farris
SP - LAA
|
|
1346.
Sam Haggerty
LF,CF - TEX
|
|
1347.
Victor Mederos
SP,RP - LAA
|
|
1348.
Spencer Turnbull
SP,RP - FA
|
|
1349.
Casey Lawrence
RP - SEA
|
|
1350.
Ky Bush
SP - CWS
|
|
1351.
Riley Cornelio
SP - WSH
|
|
1352.
Kyle Keller
RP - BOS
|
|
1353.
Mason Barnett
SP - ATH
|
|
1354.
Jared Lyons
SP - CIN
|
|
1355.
Cole Irvin
SP,RP - LAD
|
|
1356.
Jean Cabrera
SP - PHI
|
|
1357.
Marcus Stroman
SP - FA
|
|
1358.
Scott McGough
RP - FA
|
|
1359.
Hunter Strickland
RP - LAA
|
|
1360.
Braden Nett
SP - ATH
|
|
1361.
Ryan Harbin
RP - PIT
|
|
1362.
Cam Sanders
RP - PIT
|
|
1363.
Cal Quantrill
SP - TEX
|
|
1364.
Wikelman Gonzalez
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
1365.
Enmanuel De Jesus
SP,RP - DET
|
|
1366.
Gabriel Hughes
SP - COL
|
|
1367.
Austin Gomber
SP - TEX
|
|
1368.
Bradley Blalock
SP - MIA
|
|
1369.
Yilber Diaz
RP - ARI
|
|
1370.
Dan Altavilla
RP - MIN
|
|
1371.
Valente Bellozo
SP,RP - COL
|
|
1372.
Everson Pereira
LF,CF,RF - CWS
|
|
1373.
Mason Black
SP,RP - KC
|
|
1374.
Tyler Anderson
SP - FA
|
|
1375.
Lucas Sims
RP - CWS
|
|
1376.
Thomas Hatch
SP,RP - ARI
|
|
1377.
Nick Hernandez
RP - ATH
|
|
1378.
Orlando Ribalta
RP - WSH
|
|
1379.
Logan VanWey
RP - HOU
|
|
1380.
Caden Dana
SP - LAA
|
|
1381.
Andry Lara
RP - WSH
|
|
1382.
McCade Brown
SP - COL
|
|
1383.
Carson Palmquist
SP,RP - COL
|
|
1384.
Sam Aldegheri
SP - LAA
|
|
1385.
Tayron Guerrero
RP - BOS
|
|
1386.
Jonathan Cannon
SP,RP - CWS
|
|
1387.
Drew Millas
C - WSH
|
|
1388.
Luis Peralta
RP - COL
|
|
1389.
Christian Vazquez
C - HOU
|
|
1390.
Tanner Gordon
SP - COL
|
|
1391.
Andy Ibanez
2B,3B - ATH
|
|
1392.
Richard Palacios
2B - CLE
|
|
1393.
Riley Adams
C - WSH
|
|
1394.
Luke Maile
C - KC
|
|
1395.
Alex Call
LF,CF,RF - LAD
|
|
1396.
Austin Hedges
C - CLE
|
|
1397.
Tom Murphy
C - FA
|
|
1398.
Bryce Teodosio
CF - LAA
|
|
1399.
Tyler Austin
1B,RF - CHC
|
|
1400.
Cody Freeman
2B - TEX
|
|
1401.
Cesar Salazar
C - HOU
|
|
1402.
Blake Perkins
LF,CF,RF - MIL
|
|
1403.
Dom Keegan
C - TB
|
|
1404.
Garrett Stallings
SP,RP - MIL
|
|
1405.
Derek Hill
LF,CF - CWS
|
|
1406.
Tyler Tolbert
LF,CF - KC
|
|
1407.
Austin Barnes
C - FA
|
|
1408.
Chris Taylor
2B,LF,CF,RF - LAA
|
|
1409.
Ryan Vilade
LF,RF - TB
|
|
1410.
Jon Berti
2B,3B - FA
|
|
1411.
Mickey Gasper
IF,C - BOS
|
|
1412.
Alex Jackson
C - MIN
|
|
1413.
Jack Suwinski
LF,CF,RF - LAD
|
|
1414.
Bryce Johnson
LF,CF,RF - SD
|
|
1415.
Willie MacIver
C - TEX
|
|
1416.
Chadwick Tromp
C - ATL
|
|
1417.
Austin Slater
LF,CF,RF - MIA
|
|
1418.
Jorge Alfaro
C - KC
|
|
1419.
Kyle McCann
C - COL
|
|
1420.
Jhonny Pereda
C - SEA
|
|
1421.
Alex Verdugo
LF,RF - SD
|
|
1422.
Nick Loftin
2B,3B,LF - KC
|
|
1423.
Ryan Feltner
SP - COL
|
|
1424.
Ben Rortvedt
C - NYM
|
|
1425.
Eric Haase
C - SF
|
|
1426.
Rodolfo Duran
C - SD
|
|
1427.
Drew Romo
C - CWS
|
|
1428.
Will Banfield
C - CIN
|
|
1429.
Brandon Valenzuela
C,1B - TOR
|
|
1430.
Sebastian Rivero
C - LAA
|
|
1431.
Matt Thaiss
C - BOS
|
|
1432.
Tomas Nido
C - DET
|
|
1433.
Brian Serven
C - ATH
|
|
1434.
Blake Hunt
C - SD
|
|
1435.
Zach Dezenzo
LF,RF - HOU
|
|
1436.
Shane McGuire
C - ATH
|
|
1437.
Justyn-Henry Malloy
LF,RF,DH - TB
|
|
1438.
Seby Zavala
C - FA
|
|
1439.
Hayden Senger
C - NYM
|
|
1440.
Sam Huff
C - BAL
|
|
1441.
Maverick Handley
C - BAL
|
|
1442.
Jason Delay
C - BOS
|
|
1443.
Blake Sabol
C - TB
|
|
1444.
Chad Wallach
C - ATH
|
|
1445.
Jose Herrera
C - TEX
|
|
1446.
Eliezer Alfonzo
C - LAD
|
|
1447.
Dom Nunez
C - CLE
|
|
1448.
Sandy Leon
C - ATL
|
|
1449.
Justin Turner
1B,3B - FA
|
|
1450.
Johnathan Rodriguez
RF - BAL
|
|
1451.
Christian Koss
2B,3B,SS - SF
|
|
1452.
Antonio Senzatela
SP,RP - COL
|
|
1453.
Juan Brito
1B,2B - CLE
|
|
1454.
Jared Oliva
LF,CF,RF - SF
|
|
1455.
John Rave
LF,CF,RF - KC
|
|
1456.
Jorge Barrosa
LF,CF - ARI
|
|
1457.
Johan Rojas
CF - PHI
|
|
1458.
Brett Harris
3B - ATH
|
|
1459.
Jorbit Vivas
2B,3B - WSH
|
|
1460.
MJ Melendez
LF - NYM
|
|
1461.
Tristan Gray
2B,SS - MIN
|
|
1462.
Michael Helman
CF - TEX
|
|
1463.
Tirso Ornelas
LF - SD
|
|
1464.
Orlando Arcia
1B,2B,3B,SS - MIN
|
|
1465.
Nate Eaton
3B,CF,RF - BOS
|
|
1466.
LaMonte Wade Jr.
1B,RF - CWS
|
|
1467.
DJ LeMahieu
1B,2B,3B - FA
|
|
1468.
Mark Canha
LF,RF - TEX
|
|
1469.
Kyle Farmer
1B,2B,3B,SS,DH - ATL
|
|
1470.
Gio Urshela
3B - FA
|
|
1471.
Chas McCormick
LF,CF,RF - CHC
|
|
1472.
Brendan Rodgers
2B - BOS
|
|
1473.
Ildemaro Vargas
1B,2B - ARI
|
|
1474.
Yanquiel Fernandez
RF,DH - NYY
|
|
1475.
Nick Sogard
1B,2B - BOS
|
|
1476.
Matthew Lugo
LF,CF - LAA
|
|
1477.
Luis Urias
2B,3B - ARI
|
|
1478.
Kyren Paris
2B,CF - LAA
|
|
1479.
Will Wagner
1B,3B - SD
|
|
1480.
Paul DeJong
2B,3B,SS - NYY
|
|
1481.
Wilmer Flores
SP - FA
|
|
1482.
Billy Cook
CF - PIT
|
|
1483.
Gabriel Gonzalez
LF,RF - MIN
|
|
1484.
Rafael Flores
C,1B - PIT
|
|
1485.
Grant McCray
LF,CF,RF - SF
|
|
1486.
Gabriel Rincones
LF,RF - PHI
|
|
1487.
Christian Franklin
LF,CF,RF - WSH
|
|
1488.
Stuart Fairchild
LF,CF,RF - CLE
|
|
1489.
Tyler Callihan
2B,LF - PIT
|
|
1490.
Orelvis Martinez
2B,3B - FA
|
|
1491.
Kameron Misner
CF,RF - KC
|
|
1492.
Ryan Kreidler
CF - MIN
|
|
1493.
Taylor Trammell
LF,CF - HOU
|
|
1494.
Tanner Murray
2B,3B,SS,LF,RF - CWS
|
|
1495.
Junior Perez
LF,CF,RF - ATH
|
|
1496.
Tommy Troy
2B - ARI
|
|
1497.
Petey Halpin
CF - CLE
|
|
1498.
Yohandy Morales
1B,3B - WSH
|
|
1499.
Tyler Wade
2B,LF,CF - TEX
|
|
1500.
Josh Rojas
2B,3B - KC
|
|
1501.
Mason McCoy
SS - SD
|
|
1502.
Manuel Margot
LF,CF,RF - FA
|
|
1503.
Jose Siri
CF - LAA
|
|
1504.
Jonatan Clase
LF,CF - TOR
|
|
1505.
Ben Gamel
LF,RF - ATL
|
|
1506.
Dairon Blanco
LF,CF,RF - TEX
|
|
1507.
Esmerlyn Valdez
1B,LF,RF - PIT
|
|
1508.
Enmanuel Valdez
1B - PIT
|
|
1509.
Garrett Hampson
2B,LF,CF - CIN
|
|
1510.
Tim Anderson
2B,SS - FA
|
|
1511.
Akil Baddoo
LF - MIL
|
|
1512.
Pedro Leon
RF - PHI
|
|
1513.
Joey Meneses
1B - ATH
|
|
1514.
Nick Madrigal
2B,3B - LAA
|
|
1515.
Vidal Brujan
3B,SS,OF - NYM
|
|
1516.
Gustavo Campero
RF - LAA
|
|
1517.
Jared Young
1B,LF,DH - NYM
|
|
1518.
Bryan De La Cruz
LF - PHI
|
|
1519.
Ji Hwan Bae
CF,RF - NYM
|
|
1520.
Tre' Morgan
1B,OF - TB
|
|
1521.
Brock Wilken
3B - MIL
|
|
1522.
Drew Waters
LF,CF,RF - KC
|
|
1523.
Tristan Peters
CF - CWS
|
|
1524.
DaShawn Keirsey
LF,CF,RF - ATL
|
|
1525.
Victor Mesa Jr.
RF - TB
|
|
1526.
Blake Dunn
LF,RF - CIN
|
|
1527.
Bryan Torres
2B,LF,CF,RF - STL
|
|
1528.
Abraham Toro
1B,2B,3B - KC
|
|
1529.
Miles Mastrobuoni
2B,3B,LF,RF - SEA
|
|
1530.
A.J. Vukovich
3B,LF - ARI
|
|
1531.
Sterlin Thompson
1B,LF - COL
|
|
1532.
Justin Dean
CF - CHC
|
|
1533.
Kahlil Watson
LF,CF,RF - CLE
|
|
1534.
Wade Meckler
CF - LAA
|
|
1535.
Denzer Guzman
3B,SS - LAA
|
|
1536.
Brett Wisely
2B - ATL
|
|
1537.
Matt Koperniak
LF,RF - STL
|
|
1538.
Michael Siani
CF - LAD
|
|
1539.
Cesar Prieto
2B,3B,SS - STL
|
|
1540.
Weston Wilson
2B,LF - BAL
|
|
1541.
James Triantos
2B,LF,CF - CHC
|
|
1542.
Samad Taylor
2B,RF - SD
|
|
1543.
Cameron Cauley
2B,SS,OF - TEX
|
|
1544.
Matt Mervis
1B - FA
|
|
1545.
Daniel Johnson
CF,RF - MIA
|
|
1546.
Liover Peguero
1B,2B,SS - PHI
|
|
1547.
Edwin Arroyo
2B,SS - CIN
|
|
1548.
Bryan Ramos
3B - BAL
|
|
1549.
Steward Berroa
CF,RF - MIL
|
|
1550.
Jared Serna
2B,SS - MIA
|
|
1551.
Kevin Newman
1B,2B,3B,SS - KC
|
|
1552.
Rhylan Thomas
LF,RF - SEA
|
|
1553.
Connor Joe
1B,LF,RF - SEA
|
|
1554.
Dominic Fletcher
CF,RF - PIT
|
|
1555.
Luke Williams
2B,SS - ATL
|
|
1556.
Nicky Lopez
3B - COL
|
|
1557.
Dustin Harris
LF - CWS
|
|
1558.
Kristian Robinson
CF,RF - ARI
|
|
1559.
Michael Arroyo
2B - SEA
|
|
1560.
Nick Morabito
CF - NYM
|
|
1561.
Jose Azocar
LF,CF,RF - ATL
|
|
1562.
Ronny Simon
2B,LF - PIT
|
|
1563.
Cavan Biggio
1B,2B,RF - HOU
|
|
1564.
Luis Vazquez
3B,SS - BAL
|
|
1565.
RJ Schreck
RF - TOR
|
|
1566.
Victor Bericoto
1B - SF
|
|
1567.
Jase Bowen
CF - SD
|
|
1568.
Donovan Solano
1B - FA
|
|
1569.
Blaze Jordan
1B,3B - STL
|
|
1570.
Garrett Stubbs
C,DH - PHI
|
|
1571.
Jonah Bride
1B,3B - TEX
|
|
1572.
Vimael Machin
3B - COL
|
|
1573.
Ben Cowles
2B,3B,SS - CHC
|
|
1574.
Brennen Davis
LF - SEA
|
|
1575.
Tim Elko
1B - CWS
|
|
1576.
Niko Kavadas
1B,LF,RF - LAA
|
|
1577.
Trey Lipscomb
3B - WSH
|
|
1578.
Anthony Seigler
3B - BOS
|
|
1579.
Trei Cruz
SS,LF,CF - DET
|
|
1580.
Jose Barrero
SS,CF - BAL
|
|
1581.
Eduardo Valencia
C,1B,DH - DET
|
|
1582.
Cristian Pache
LF,CF - NYM
|
|
1583.
Aaron Schunk
2B,3B,SS - ATL
|
|
1584.
Juan Yepez
1B - FA
|
|
1585.
Alika Williams
2B,SS - PIT
|
|
1586.
Josh Kasevich
3B,SS - TOR
|
|
1587.
Tsung-Che Cheng
2B,3B,SS - BOS
|
|
1588.
Marco Luciano
2B,SS - NYY
|
|
1589.
Davis Wendzel
3B - PIT
|
|
1590.
Ryan Fitzgerald
2B,SS - LAD
|
|
1591.
Trey Mancini
1B,LF,RF - LAA
|
|
1592.
Jacob Amaya
SS - ARI
|
|
1593.
Donovan Walton
2B - LAA
|
|
1594.
Nate Furman
2B - SF
|
|
1595.
Emmanuel Rivera
1B,3B - FA
|
|
1596.
Vinny Capra
3B,SS - BOS
|
|
1597.
Oliver Dunn
3B - CWS
|
|
1598.
Leandro Cedeno
1B - SD
|
|
1599.
Ethan Murray
SS - MIL
|
|
1600.
Scott Kingery
2B - CHC
|
|
1601.
Sergio Alcantara
2B,3B,SS - PHI
|
|
1602.
Patrick Wisdom
1B,3B,OF - SEA
|
|
1603.
Luken Baker
1B,DH - ARI
|
|
1604.
Tristin English
1B,3B,RF - ATL
|
|
1605.
Grae Kessinger
2B,3B - NYM
|