Tout Table: How to Improve Batting Average

Let’s mix a little game theory with roster management and player analysis.

How do you go about improving in the batting average (OBP) category?

Jeff Zimmerman (Fangraphs, @jeffwzimmerman): Trades. While it sounds simple, move extreme contributors in power and speed but low OBP for hitters who provide OBP. The only other option is seeing if your team’s lowest OBP can be upgraded. Otherwise, it’s nearly impossible to improve on it.

Brad Johnson (Patreon BaseballATeam, @BaseballATeam): The main thing is to actually do the math. Say you see you have a .260 AVG and want to be at .268. What does that actually mean in terms of the average you need to get there? Converting AVG into H/AB can help you visualize matters. It’s one thing to say “I need someone with a .325 AVG.” But you might need to spread that over several someones and figure out some platoons. That’s when seeing it as H/AB is most helpful.

Fred Zinkie (Yahoo/Rotowire, @FredZinkieMLB): Addition by subtraction. Either via trade or the waiver wire, try to get rid of the players who are killing your BA/OBP (assuming that you have reason to believe that those players will continue to have low averages from this point forward).

Rick Wolf (SiriusXM, @RickWolf1): Colton & The Wolfman use addition by subtraction. This does mean dropping players who hit for a low average or have a low OBP if that is your league’s format but only if they are not providing anything else. If the players have power or speed, find a trading partner. Trade that player in a package to get a need, usually pitching. Rely on BABIP to tell you if your player or a targeted player will improve his batting average. Low BABIP means the player has been unlucky. Expect a player’s average to go up if they are below their average BABIP.

Matt Williams (The Game Day, @MattWi77iams): I think the best route to improve AVG/OBP is by either working the trade market in order to improve any glaring deficiencies in your lineup, or by trying to take advantage of batting platoons. Platoons require the proper time & research to be successful, but it is a tried-and-true method to improve those categories.

Scott Swanay (FantasyBaseballSherpa, @fantasy_sherpa): If I’m prioritizing AVG or OBP to gain ground in the standings, then I’ll prioritize it when I look at rest-of-season projections for waiver wire players and/or players I’m considering trading for. Then again, since AVG/OBP are subject to quite a bit of random variation and can move down as well as up, it’s rare I’ll prioritize either in a vacuum. Also, given that in a 5×5 league there are typically 2 average-based pitching categories, but only 1 average-based hitting category, I generally focus less on the average-based hitting category than the pitching ones.

Scott Engel (The Game Day, @ScottETheKing): You really aren’t going to find much of anything on waivers. So my focus would be on the trade market. In a league with very experienced players, such as Tout Wars, it’s not difficult to make a fair deal. There isn’t much salesmanship involved, which can be annoying in other leagues. Each side knows what the other needs and what the other is willing to give up. You’re not going to rip anyone off, but you should always be able to fill a need.

Ray Murphy (BaseballHQ, @RayHQ): First step is excising your biggest BA/OBP offenders. You probably have someone on your roster, maybe not even a catcher, who’s got a .210 BA or worse. Stop playing them. Even finding a relatively empty .250 replacement is a meaningful improvement. From there, you can take the suggestions of others above: do the math to see what gains are possible, what regression candidates you have on your roster. Target trades, etc.

Vlad Sedler (FTN Fantasy, @rotogut): Folks on here have covered many of the important ways to do so, the most helpful recommending trades and to cut the hitters with subpar plate discipline who are damaging and dragging down your OBP. Worth noting that we must still be cognizant of the fact that there are nine other categories to be mindful of. In case we’re considering a full overhaul.

Doug Dennis (BaseballHQ, @dougdennis41): Agree with above comments about math. I think typically it is a constant effort to improve the roster through PAs, but here we are saying that BA or OBP is where a larger number of standings points can be gained. What can I do to add 3 or 4 points in the standings without subtracting 3 or 4 somewhere else? In these competitive leagues, runs, RBIs, HRs and to some extent SBs are bought through PAs, so even when subtracting someone, you have to make sure it isn’t harming your other categories. Trade-wise, if I am trading to help one category, I look to only give up one other category if at all possible. So perhaps a team that has excess BA or OBP needs steals and I have a surplus of steals from a guy who is otherwise not helping me (runs, RBIs, HRs, BA or OBP). Or maybe it is saves that I can trade. Point is–it is one category for one category with a trade partner who has the need where my surplus can help. That is who I want to trade and the trade partner I want to target. Hypothetically speaking.

Jeff Erickson (Rotowire, @Jeff_Erickson): Step 1 – excise Javy Baez. Step 2 …. Step 3 – Profit!

Doug Dennis (BaseballHQ, @dougdennis41): Ha! *checks to see if I have Javy Baez active anywhere*

Chris Clegg (Pitcher List, @RotoClegg): I think improving your batting average or OBP is always easier said than done. It does take work and effort. As many have mentioned, doing the math is important. See what you actually need rest of season and make moves that push you toward that goal. If your ratios seem bad right now, know it’s not to late to make moves to help your team via trade or waiver wire.

Michael A. Stein (Fantasy Judgment, @FantasyJudgment): I am disappointed I missed the dumping on Javier Baez by a few minutes, but I swear I was going throw him under the bus. Javier Baez makes Rob Deer look like Tony Gwynn. Batting average or OBP are difficult to significantly improve for all the reasons stated before. Trades are definitely the best way to go about improving. You could also make a conscious choice to bench everyday players who have low BA or OBP and opt for a part-time player who may not hurt you as much. This only works if you are solid in the other categories.

Mike Podhorzer (Fangraphs, @MikePodhorzer): Either by exercising excruciating patience if your roster is filled with unlucky BABIPers, or by trading for Luis Arraez.

Ariel Cohen (CBS Sports, @ATCNY): I think that it is obvious to everyone that if you stopped playing the lowest OBP players on your roster, in favor of the higher OBP players – you would theoretically improve your OBP going forward. There isn’t much wisdom in telling you that. I think the question becomes – which is it is the more efficient approach to make up points in the category by A) Using your own roster alone B) By looking on the waiver wire, or by C) Trading. And by efficient, I mean which compromises your other categories the least, and is the better use of fantasy capital (FAAB, player capital, etc.) for the largest potential improvement? Now, the answer is inherently roster and format dependent. However, I will say that I believe that the waiver wire option will be the least efficient of the three. The players capable of altering your ratios off the wire may be a larger drain on your team’s overall value than using options within (small gain for medium loss). And a for trading – although this option costs the most fantasy capital – it also tends to have the best chance at team improvement (medium gain at a cost). So the bottom line of what I’m saying here for advice – is that it is roster and format dependent, but trading or managing your active roster more closely may be more efficient than heading to the waiver wire in June for OBP improvement.

Andy Behrens (Yahoo Fantasy Sports, @andybehrens): Well, I’m giving Ryan Noda a test drive. Here’s hoping it works. It would be great if I could just stop using Jorge Mateo, but someone has to steal these bases.

Brent Hershey (Baseball HQ, @BrentHQ): The random fluctuation thing is what makes improving BA/OBP challenging IMO. Trading/lopping off offenders is a great way to do it, but if you’re stuck with picking up a free agent to try and help, I stick to skills and cross my fingers. BB/K for BA (especially combined with a poor BABIP; and double-digit BB% (either historical or projected) for OBP.

Ryan Bloomfield (BaseballHQ, @RyanBHQ): Lots of goodies so far, I’ll throw in Park Factors as something else you might use to gain an edge. We usually think of ballpark (dis)advantages in terms of home runs, but each track can play differently for batting average as well. BaseballHQ’s Park Factors, for example, has Wrigley Field boosting batting average for LHB by 11% despite it being a tough park for homers. To nobody’s surprise, Coors Field is MLB’s best batting average park with +13% and +19% BA gains for LHB and RHB, respectively. Play guys hitting in good parks!

Mike Gianella (Baseball Prospectus, @MikeGianella): I hate echoing everyone else but unless you’re in a shallower league, trades are the way to go here. Focus on another team that’s also low in the category and see if you can get them to give up in AVG/OBP in exchange for more power or speed. If it’s a team lower in the standings than you that needs to make a Hail Mary to contend, all the better.

Todd Zola (Mastersball, @toddzola): For me, the first step is identifying the reason for the deficiency. Keep in mind, batting average (OBP) is the most tightly bunched category. Plus, you can gain points if those above you drop in average. The point being, you may not have to do anything if you have a few players hitting into bad luck, with regression likely. If the shortfall won’t take care of itself, the first place I look is catchers. Sometimes replacing a batting average crusher with a guy who doesn’t play much, but hits for a reasonable average can help the category without hurting counting stats. Past that, looking for unlucky players on the waiver wire, or an opponent’s roster is a nice pathway, since cost of acquisition may be reasonable. Players with a big delta between their xBA and BA are clear targets, though xBA can be misleading since it is essentially a park neutral stat and may be different per home venue. Still, it’s a good place to start. I’ll also look for players hitting the ball harder, or fanning less, without commensurate results.

Grey Albright (RazzBall, @razzball): Trade for players who have been unlucky on BABIP, or trade for Javier Baez and pay him not to play.

Dylan White (Baseball America, @the__arrival): It’s extremely difficult to make up ground – especially at this point in the season. For example, my Tout team, as currently constructed, is projected to end up with a .330 OBP. I drafted a number of counting stats guys who weren’t the greatest from an OBP standpoint: players like Willy Adames, Nick Castellanos, and Austin Hays. At this point in the season, taking currently accrued stats, if I replaced Nick Castellanos (ROS projection of .321 OBP) with, say, Christian Yelich’s projected ROS OBP of .363, my overall team’s OBP would only be projected to rise to .332. An improvement no doubt (+0.002). But there is certainly not a player of Yelich’s caliber on the wire. Looking at the best OBP projections available: Brandon Belt (.331), DJ LeMahieu (.344), or, for this Castellanos-replacement example, Jesse Winker (.348), my team’s overall projected seasonal OBP only goes up by +0.001…and that doesn’t even consider the loss in other categories. All this to say: the math isn’t in your favor to make up ground in OBP (or BA). You need to set an appropriate foundation during the draft (in my experience) or make sure all of your waiver wire transactions incrementally move upward in OBP/BA.

Scott Chu (Pitcher List, @ifthechufits): This is tough, because streaming batting average is really difficult outside attacking the 81 games in Coors field. If I was going to stream AVG, my approach would be to exploit platoons to the extreme. Guys like Gabriel Moreno and Rob Refsnyder aren’t appealing most of the time, but finding a spot for them when they’ll see 3+ lefties in a week can make an impact. Against righties, Kevin Kiermaier and Mauricio Dubon can do some damage. It’s not sexy, but at this point of the season you’re likely streaming a position or two anyway. Of course, in head-to-head formats, the easier play is to ignore the category entirely – your roster’s weekly batting average is impossible to predict. Even the streaming options won’t do much for you week-to-week as it’s their season-long cumulative impact than you’re chasing.

Paul Sporer (Fangraphs, @Sporer): Cutting the chaff with the guys who are hurting you most as many have mentioned is a major piece as well as patience on the hitters you believe in. You can stream hitters, but they won’t fix it in a week, so make sure you’re not expecting instant results with your pickups.

Anthony Aniano (Rotoballer, @AAnianoFantasy): Sometimes the best way to improve batting average is not by adding player but by subtraction. Case in point this season is Kyle Schwarber, if you need to make up point in BA and have enough power just replacing him with a .265 hitter will help your team gain a few points.

Frank Ammirante (The GameDayHQ, @FAmmiranteTFJ): You can improve your OBP by targeting a hitter with a high walk rate who has gotten off to a slow start this season. The perfect example of this is Triston Casas, who has a 15.7 BB%, but his OBP is only .318 due to his .194 batting average. Casas will eventually start performing more like a .230 to .240 hitter, which would make his OBP much better. There’s a good chance that he’s widely available due to his struggles so far.

Patrick Davitt (BaseballHQ, @patrickdavitt): Project your whole league’s standings using a couple of stats sources to see how much gain you can make with the various tactics discussed above. It might be that someone ahead of you in the cat will move past you going backwards, if they’ve had an unsustainably hot BA start.

Jason Collette (Rotowire, @jasoncollette): It honestly depends on league context. In LABR, we can’t just bench guys so if you didn’t properly account for OBP risks, it’s an uphill slog. At least in Tout, we can cycle slumps out of our lineup to help manage the OBP risks. I do work to look at expected stats and look to take chances on trades or pickups while look to proactively bench folks over their skis. For example, I benched Brandon Lowe in another league before this current slump (even before the injury) got too bad. I wish I would have done the same with a slumping Taylor Walls.

Ian Kahn (, @IanKahn4): Baseball is a game of talent, skill, and most importantly confidence. I am looking at the guys on the wire who have been hot over the last 7 days. They will continue getting at-bats and might at least help a bit. Also, just sit Gallo some weeks. I know I do.

Tout Daily: Mitching and Matching

It’s Period 3, Week 2 of Tout Daily. Here are some of the picks on the night Elly De La Cruz makes his long-awaited debut.

Pitcher: Kevin Gausman – Rolling with Kevin Gausman (TOR – P) tonight at $11,000. He’s the gasman and he’s bringing the heat. Gausman already has 100 strikeouts this season and fanned 11 in his last outing.

Hitter: Tucupita Marcano – Tucupita Marcano (PIT – SS) is grossly undervalued tonight at on $2,100. He’s averaging 5 fantasy points per game. I’ll take it.

Sara Sanchez (bleedcubbieblue.com, @BCB_Sara)

Pitcher: Mitch Keller – He’s struck out at least 8 in his last 10 starts and the outliers are 10 and 13. Sign me up.

Hitter: Mookie Betts – That 2B eligibility is amazing and he’s playing at Great American Smallpark

Erik Halterman (Rotowire, @erik_halterman)

Pitcher: Clarke Schmidt – Schmidt has extreme splits this year, as we’re seeing with many pitchers who’ve adopted a sweeper. Lefties have hit .330/.403/.569 against him this year, but righties are hitting .248/.286/.393. That makes the White Sox a great matchup, their four best hitters by wRC+ all bat right-handed.

Hitter: Patrick Wisdom – I want to load up on right-handed Cubs against Tyler Anderson and his 5.47 ERA (5.83 SIERA) and I’m not picky about which ones. Wisdom is slumping, but a pitcher who can’t miss bats (13.8 K%) is a great matchup for a hitter with huge pop but major contact concerns.

Todd Zola (Mastersball, @toddzola)

Pitcher: Joe Musgrove – The FUNGO likes Musgrove tonight, mainly because he’s at home, and the Mariners fan a bunch vs. RHP

Hitter: Will Smith – I like the Marcano call above since the chalk will be Elly De La Cruz at 2K. SFG in Coors also chalky, so I’ll stack LAD vs. Weaver

Ray Murphy (BaseballHQ, @RayHQ)

Pitcher: Clarke Schmidt – I agree with Erik above re: Clarke Schmidt. His L/R splits are pronounced, and the CHW lineup doesn’t have the lefty thump to hurt him.

Hitter: Elly de la Cruz – Elly making his debut batting cleanup at $2000 is too good to pass up, even if it’s chalky. I’ll fade Coors instead. Hey, this is supposed to be fun, right?

Tout Wars FAB Report: Week of June 5

Welcome to the weekly FAB report. The NL only wallets were opened this week with three triple-digit winning bids.

The headings to each league are direct links where you can see the rosters, standings and transactions.

American League

Player Team Bid
BWoo, Sea Eric Samulski 96
GAnderson, Tex Patrick Davitt 65
KCalhoun, FA Patrick Davitt 39
JBride, Oak Rob Leibowitz 38
ROlson, Det Eric Samulski 37
RJeffers, Min Eric Samulski 29
JMarisnick, Det Eric Samulski 21
ZShort, Det Andy Andres 16
RStephenson, TB Rick Wolf/Glenn Colton 9
MFord, Sea Eric Samulski 7
JKaprielian, Oak Larry Schechter 1
TRichards, Tor Chris Blessing 1
TKemp, Oak Joe Sheehan 1
PMaton, Hou Patrick Davitt 0

National League

Player Team Bid
GSanchez, SD Ian Kahn 142
JLawrence, Col Wilderman/Prior 129
LBaker, StL Brian Walton 129
JDeLuca, LAD Grey Albright 74
BDixon, SD Steve Gardner 42
AMonasterio, Mil Todd Zola 37
EMontero, Col Phil Hertz 37
JSingleton, Mil Ian Kahn 24
AToro, Mil Grey Albright 23
JPalacios, Pit Wilderman/Prior 19
MAmaya, ChC Grey Albright 12
JJunis, SF Phil Hertz 7
IVargas, Was Phil Hertz 7
ASmithShawver, Atl Steve Gardner 6
LMaile, Cin Steve Gardner 5
KNelson, Ari Peter Kreutzer 3
AAdams, Ari Erik Halterman 2
DEllis, Phi Erik Halterman 1
SWilson, SD Derek Carty 0
CHolderman, Pit Todd Zola 0

Mixed Salary Cap

Player Team Bid
JWalker, StL Justin Mason 333
JSanchez, Mia Brent Hershey 89
ASmithShawver, Atl Brent Hershey 81
JLawrence, Col Nick Pollack 67
TGrisham, SD Scott Swanay 45
EDeLaCruz, Cin Zach Steinhorn 38
AAbbott, Cin Scott Swanay 28
ROlson, Det Jeff Zimmerman 23
THenry, Ari Scott Engel 22
GSanchez, SD Justin Mason 19
HHarvey, Was Scott Chu 17
YGurriel, Mia Alex Chamberlain 10
RContreras, Pit Kev Mahserejian 9
GAnderson, Tex Nick Pollack 5
JBauers, NYY Scott Chu 4
RCastro, Pit Kev Mahserejian 3
JBleday, Oak Jeff Zimmerman 3
ZGreinke, KC Jeff Zimmerman 2
NFortes, Mia Kev Mahserejian 1

Mixed Draft

Player Team Bid
THenry, Ari AJ Mass 150
LBaker, StL Tim McLeod 71
MDubon, Hou Tim McCullough 42
DHall, Phi Dr, Roto 34
JLawrence, Col Scott White 27
JTaillon, ChC D.J. Short 25
MThaiss, LAA Tim McCullough 22
NJones, Col Adam Ronis 14
MMassey, KC Shelly Verougstraete 10
JBarria, LAA Adam Ronis 8
HWesneski, ChC Dr, Roto 6
SFairchild, Cin AJ Mass 1
RBlanco, Hou Mike Gianella 1
ASmithShawver, Atl Shelly Verougstraete 0
GSanchez, SD Ryan Bloomfield 0

Head to Head

Player Team Bid
AAbbott, Cin Frank Stampfl 182
THenry, Ari Geoff Pontes 69
JTaillon, ChC Geoff Pontes 68
JNaylor, Cle Ariel Cohen 45
HWesneski, ChC Michael Govier 32
JBae, Pit Ryan Hallam 27
WBrennan, Cle Joe Gallina 23
BLively, Cin Lauren Auerbach 21
JTeheran, Mil Ariel Cohen 18
LBaker, StL Sky Dombroske 16
GSanchez, SD Sky Dombroske 14
BDoyle, Col Michael Govier 12
BWoo, Sea Sky Dombroske 12
RGrichuk, Col Lauren Auerbach 11
RContreras, Pit Lauren Auerbach 9
ASmithShawver, Atl Greg Jewett 9
EDeLaCruz, Cin Frank Stampfl 4
OMiller, Mil Greg Jewett 3
BAbreu, Hou Clay Link 0

Mixed with IP & Saves+Holds

Player Team Bid
JWalker, StL Chris Clegg 57
HWesneski, ChC Chris Clegg 37
JSears, Oak Andy Behrens 21
MVientos, NYM Carlos Marcano 15
NJones, Col Brian Entrekin 12
OMiller, Mil Matt Trussell 11
RNoda, Oak Andy Behrens 11
ROlson, Det Sara Sanchez 10
JSanchez, Mia Brian Entrekin 6
JDonaldson, NYY Chris Clegg 5
LWade, SF Brian Entrekin 4
KGibson, Bal Jeff Boggis 1
ZGreinke, KC Jeff Boggis 1
ASmithShawver, Atl Matt Trussell 1
CTaylor, LAD Dylan White 0
CWong, Bos Dylan White 0

Tout Table: Hitting Speculations

This week’s question is question is a four-parter, multiple choice style.

1. Who compiles the highest 5×5 earnings for the rest of the season
A. Ronald Acuna Jr.
B. Anyone else
2. Who ends the season with the most steals?
A. Jorge Mateo
B. Ji Hwan Bae
C. Starling Marte
3. Who ends the season with the most homers?
A. Matt Olson
B. Max Muncy
C. Jorge Soler
4. Who accrues more plate appearances for the rest of the season?
A. Mike Trout
B. Aaron Judge
C. Luis Robert

Doug Dennis (BaseballHQ, @dougdennis41): Crystal ball on health–I wish!! But! Nostradamus says (1) Acuna is just a force to behold this year and only injury can stop him from owning that top slot. I don’t even have a “close second” although I think Aaron Judge would probably be it. (2) Steals–who is going to get the PAs all season? Mateo–I hate his OBP and think he could (should!) lose PAs down the road. Marte seems to get hurt/wear down. I’ll guess Bae. But it is only a guess. Esteury Ruiz might end up with more than those three combined! (3) Olson should beat Muncy and Soler in HRs with a much more reliable bat and Muncy is nicked up already. (4) Judge will have more PAs than Trout or Robert, both of whom seem to lose PAs to injuries to a greater extent than Judge has, but really, this is just a question of health.

Matt Williams (The Game Day, @MattWi77iams): 1.) Ronald Acuña: He is playing on another level this season and picking anyone else would be contrarian for the sake of it. 2.) Starling Marte: I do not trust Mateo, and while Starling has injury concerns, I also believe the Mets will end up scoring significantly more runs than the Pirates. 3.)Matt Olson: He can go on a tear at a anytime and is protected in an elite lineup 4.) Aaron Judge: This question is a complete guess, I went with my gut.

Scott White (CBS Fantasy Sports, @CBSScottWhite): 1) Ronald Acuna. Even if Aaron Judge approaches 60 homers again (which is a very big if), Acuna is running way too much to be caught, I think. 2) Starling Marte. The “chalk” answer is probably Jorge Mateo, but he’s come crashing back down to earth as a hitter and may not have much job security. 3) Matt Olson. Easy call. He’s the best htiter of the three and the most likely to stay healthy, too, if history is any indication. 4) Aaron Judge. It’s mostly a health thing. I suspect Mike Trout’s back will require a stint on the IL at some point, and Luis Robert seems to be hurt as often as he’s healthy (if not more).

Andy Andres (BaseballHQ, @sabermetrics101): Here goes: 1) I think it is Judge for most value for the rest of the year, so I take the field against Acuna 2) The three are pretty equal, but I will go with Bae, bc he has the best road to the most playing time 3) Not Soler, due to playing time risk, I think it will be Olson — but I want it to be Muncy, bc it would return great value for all of the people who invested in him this year! (And I root for the Dodgers) 4) Trout, even with his injury risk, it looks like he is motivated to stay in the lineup this year bc it might be Ohtani’s last year with the Angels

Chris Blessing (BaseballHQ, @C_Blessing): 1. Acuña, with health, continues to run away for 5 by 5 earnings in the 2nd half. He’s on a mission to prove his doubters wrong. It’s Michael Jordon-esque motavation. Don’t bet against this man. 2. Marte’s bat looks shot. His legs look shot in the OF too. I’m not believing he can keep up his SB pace, even if the Mets play better in the 2nd half and he gets on base more. I hate Mateo’s profile but I’m betting on Mateo to outrun Marte and Bae. 3. I’m betting on the hit tool in this contest, leaning into Olson’s hit tool to outlast Soler and Muncy in the HR department this year. As a Muncy believer, it’s a stretch he can keep the HR total up with his BA failings. Soler gets traded at some point, right? He’ll lose ABs in the process. 4. I’m all-in on Aaron Judge with the most plate appearanced between these dudes. Robert is made of glass and Trout’s back is a big question mark holding up during the length of the season.

Michael Govier (FTN Fantasy, @mjgovier): Anyone else, Starling Marte, Matt Olson and Mike Trout. Brevity at its finest.

Phil Hertz (Baseball HQ, @prhz50): Same as Michael – my anyone else is Ohtani.

Shelly Verougstraete (NBC Sports EDGE Baseball, @ShellyV_643): 1) Ronald Acuña Jr. – He seems to be a man on a mission to get that 40/40 season. 2) Starling Marte – This one is a playing time bet. I think Mateo loses his spot in the O’s lineup soon because he has been as cold as ice for close to a month now. 3) Matt Olson – He was my pick to lead the NL in homers at the beginning of the season 4) Aaron Judge – This is a health bet. Luis Robert Jr. always misses time and Trout always has an IL stint or two during the year so I’ll go with the player who already took theirs.

Mike Sheets (ESPN, @MikeASheets): 1) The smart money is taking the field, but if pressed to pick one player, I’m still going with Acuna. 2) Give me Marte on the steals. Health is never a sure thing, but if he’s healthy, he’ll continue playing every day, which I can’t say confidently about Mateo or Bae. 3) Olson is the easy choice for me here. 4) I could go either way on Judge or Trout here, but I’ll take Judge over Trout, who likely still has an IL stint in him this year.

CJ Kaltenbach (Fantasy Guru, @TheSeigeDFS): 1) Given Acuna’s injury history I’m going to take the field but if he stays healthy he will be the #1 player 2) I trust Bae’s playing time the most of those three so I’ll go with him but I project them all within 1-2 steals of each other 3) Matt Olson hasn’t had the hot Atlanta summer to boost his HR total yet and that should be the difference 4) Aaron Judge is on the best team and has the best lineup slot so I’ll take him given all three players have equally checkered injury histories.

Fred Zinkie (Yahoo/Rotowire, @FredZinkieMLB): 1) Always smart to take the field over an individual. 2) I’ll take Marte. 3) Olson for sure. 4) I want to say Trout, but I’m picking Judge.

Adam Ronis (Fantasy Alarm, @AdamRonis): 1. It will be Acuna as long as he doesn’t miss a signicant amount of time. 2. Mateo had an awful May, but Marte hasn’t looked good and is likely to miss time with injury. 3. Olson is the pick. 4. Judge.

Dave Adler (BaseballHQ, @daveadler01): 1. Acuna going nuts, but…take the field. ALWAYS take the field in bets like this. 2. Mateo – he won’t be an Oriole much longer, and still won’t hit, but ends up running frequently wherever he goes. 3. Olson, by a hair; 4. Trout finds a way to stay healthy…

Rob Leibowitz (Rotoheaven, @rob_leibowitz): 1. Acuna has too much up and down playing time history issues to not take the field in that kind of bet. 2. Marte – Best bet at playing time. Baltimore has too many middle infield type prospects to let a sub .300 OBP guy keep the job for too long. 3. Olson is my guy. 4. Judge. He has less of a spector hanging over him than do Robert and Trout.

Scott Swanay (FantasyBaseballSherpa, @fantasy_sherpa): 1) I’ll go with the field (Judge again?) just to be a contrarian, but immense respect for Acuna and the trajectory he’s currently on – glad he’s been able to stay healthy. 2) I’ll go with Marte over Bae and Mateo just because I think his ROS playing time is a little more certain than it is for the other two – the adage about not being able to steal first base comes to mind. 3) Among these 3 I’ll go w/ Olson among these three, but still think it’s likely that Judge ends up lapping the field again in terms of who leads the league. 4) I’ll go with Judge over Robert (because NYY should have better offense than CWS ROS) and Trout (like Kershaw, he’s gotten to the point where I don’t really trust him to stay healthy for prolonged periods of time).

Dylan White (Baseball America, @the__arrival): (1) I mean, it’s gotta be ‘the field’. Looks like BATX (per my calcs) have FTJ and RAJ with the same ROS projection (under Main Event format). So, that’s enough for me to say the field. (2) I think Mateo’s playing time situation is the most up in the air (with Bae 2nd). Marte – if healthy (obviously a big if) – has the safest playing time situation. Marte for me. (3) my initial gut feel was Soler but BATX has Olson with 28 ROS and Muncy and Soler with 23 ROS. That’s a big enough difference for me to pick Olson. (4) Since 2021, Judge has accrued 1500+ PAs and Robert and Trout have both been below 1000 PAs. Judge for me for ROS.

Kev Mahserejian (Fox Sports, @RotoSurgeon): 1) Acuna has legitimately no flaws in his fantasy profile and after a torrid start like this, my bet is he remains #1 outside of injury. 2) Bae for the simple fact that he has an everyday role on an average team that will continue to allow him opportunities. Marte has his history of injury woes and Mateo is a play-time risk. 3) Olson because he will likely finish with the most plate appearances among this trio thanks to playing in the best offense. 4) Aaron Judge. His injury history is nowhwere near as severe as Trout or Robert’s where surgeries to correct major hip and foot issues came into play.

Jeff Boggis (Fantasy Football Empire, @JeffBoggis): 1. Acuna, but Freddie Freeman and Aaron Judge will give him competition. 2. Ji Hwan Bae as he has a higher on base percentage than Jorge Mateo. 3. Matt Olson as he will heat up even more like a summer in Atlanta. 4. Aaron Judge. All three have suffered injuries, but Judge’s injury is less prone to repeat.

Todd Zola (Mastersball, @toddzola): I agree with those saying if the question is Acuna or anyone else, it’s always right to take the field. That said, I suspect Acuna would be the near consensus top ranked player for the rest of the season. As for the rest, I’ll say Bae, Olson and Trout. I wish I included Buxton and not Robert Jr. as the third option. Anyway, Trout has been relatively healthy, but there have been seasons where he’s been hurt late, so he’s not out of the woods, not even close. That said, maybe I’m wish casting, or perhaps there is some recency bias after watching Aaron Judge survive his Bump Bailey moment.

Tout Daily: Respect Thy Elder

It’s the first week of Period 3, and we’re all tied for first (and last).

Here are some players the Touts hope will break the tie.

Howard Bender (Fantasy Alarm, @RotoBuzzGuy)

Pitcher: Zac Gallen – If the 0.77 home ERA and the strikeout potential don’t lure you in, how about the fact that the Rockies suck, especially on the road?

Hitter: Eloy Jimenez – He’s been hot since coming back from his appendectomy, he’s facing a tomato can in Tyler Anderson and over his last 10 games played, Jimenez is hitting .425 with a 1.189 OPS.

Todd Zola (Mastersball, @toddzola)

Pitcher: Shane McClanahan – Only one blight on an otherwise stellar campaign. The Cubs will not make it two. At least I hope not.

Hitter: Emmanuel Rivera – Stacking Snakes against Kyle Freeland, Rivera batting second for 2.9 K. That works.

Rick Wolf (SiriusXM, @RickWolf1)

Pitcher: Bryce Elder – Facing Oakland. Been consistently getting better in each start. With a LHP facing him, the Braves should clean up.

Hitter: Royce Lewis – Almost a free square at $2000. Tough to pass up after 2-5 with a homer and 4 RBI yesterday. Stacking Braves, Mets and Twins.

Jeff Boggis (Fantasy Football Empire, @JeffBoggis)

Pitcher: Bryce Elder – The Elder Wand was one of three magical objects that made up the fabled Deathly Hallows, along with the Resurrection Stone and the Cloak of Invisibility. Tonight, I am recommending Bryce Elder and his cloak of invisibility against the Oakland Athletics tonight. I like his $9,300 slary compared to other higher priced options.

Hitter: Will Smith – Staying with the price theme, I’m going with the fresh price (Will Smith) as my top hitter tonight. I typically do not like to spend a $5,400 salary on a catcher, but I love the matchup against Washington’s Irvin.

Tout Wars FAB Report: Week of May 29

It was a quiet week for pickups in the Tout Wars kingdom. If you’d like to check out the rosters, standings and transactions for any of the leagues, just click on the league header, and by the magic of jump links, you’ll be transported to the publicly accessible OnRoto site.

American League

Player Team Bid
BJoyce, LAA Rob Leibowitz 16
CBiggio, Tor Andy Andres 15
BStewart, Min Jason Collette 12
WCalhoun, NYY Rick Wolf/Glenn Colton 9
JScholtens, CWS Rick Wolf/Glenn Colton 6
JoseDeLeon, Min Jason Collette 6
SBachman, LAA Rob Leibowitz 5
THeineman, Tor Rob Leibowitz 3
JBradley, KC Eric Samulski 3
HKjerstad, Bal Eric Samulski 3
JBeeks, TB Jeff Erickson 1
GSantos, CWS Doug Dennis 0
RLopez, CWS Patrick Davitt 0

National League

Player Team Bid
NJones, Col Derek Carty 112
YGurriel, Mia Phil Hertz 77
JonDavis, Mia Ian Kahn 54
JTeheran, Mil Ian Kahn 34
ATrejo, Col Tristan H. Cockcroft 34
MMastrobuoni, ChC Wilderman/Prior 24
DRuf, Mil Todd Zola 23
RMauricio, NYM Erik Halterman 21
DCovey, Phi Rick Graham 19
DLamet, Col Grey Albright 7
ZDavies, Ari Phil Hertz 6
JDelay, Pit Todd Zola 3
BWisely, SF Rick Graham 1
JHerrera, Ari Phil Hertz 0
DMoreta, Pit Tristan H. Cockcroft 0

Mixed Salary Cap

Player Team Bid
RLewis, Min Scott Swanay 159
JMcCarthy, Ari Zach Steinhorn 88
NJones, Col Scott Swanay 39
KGibson, Bal Nick Pollack 36
LRaley, TB CJ Kaltenbach 32
OMiller, Mil Scott Engel 19
DLynch, KC Garion Thorne 14
ABaddoo, Det Kev Mahserejian 11
WCastro, Min Scott Chu 11
BLively, Cin Scott Engel 7
HHarvey, Was Kev Mahserejian 2
LMedina, Oak Brent Hershey 1
CEPerez, Oak Kev Mahserejian 1
BNaylor, Cle Justin Mason 1
TyRogers, SF Scott Chu 1
JBeeks, TB Scott Chu 1

Mixed Draft

Player Team Bid
JMcCarthy, Ari Seth Trachtman 215
BBielak, Hou Tim McCullough 202
MMoniak, LAA Anthony Aniano 75
ZMcKinstry, Det Ryan Bloomfield 32
RSuarez, Phi Mike Gianella 14
CRea, Mil Ray Murphy 11
RCastro, Pit Dr, Roto 11
PBailey, SF Shelly Verougstraete 6
AAbbott, Cin Ryan Bloomfield 6
BLively, Cin Dr, Roto 5
ABaddoo, Det Adam Ronis 3
GWilliams, Cle Scott White 1
RMauricio, NYM Scott White 1
BAbreu, Hou Scott White 0
JKaprielian, Oak Mike Gianella 0

Head to Head

Player Team Bid
AHouser, Mil Clay Link 64
MSoroka, Atl Frank Stampfl 53
MOzuna, Atl Sky Dombroske 41
MBoyd, Det Ariel Cohen 38
ZMcKinstry, Det Greg Jewett 36
NSenzel, Cin Ariel Cohen 35
JBarria, LAA Joe Gallina 29
RLewis, Min Greg Jewett 27
PBailey, SF Joe Gallina 23
ABaddoo, Det Sky Dombroske 18
TyAnderson, LAA Ariel Cohen 14
AFaedo, Det Michael Govier 12
JSiri, TB Lauren Auerbach 9
RWeathers, SD Michael Govier 7
JCaballero, Sea Joe Gallina 5
BBielak, Hou Frank Ammirante 3

Mixed with IP & Saves+Holds

Player Team Bid
BMiller, LAD Chris Towers 141
JSiri, TB Chris Towers 74
ROdor, SD Jennifer Piacenti 36
PDeJong, StL Jennifer Piacenti 31
ZMcKinstry, Det Andy Behrens 26
LRaley, TB Matt Trussell 18
PMaton, Hou Jennifer Piacenti 11
AHays, Bal Dylan White 4
MLeiter, ChC Dylan White 3
MSoroka, Atl Sara Sanchez 2
MWacha, SD Jeff Boggis 1
MMaldonado, Hou Dylan White 0

Tout Table: Would You Rather, Pitching Edition

Everyone likes choices. This week, we had some fun grouping three pitchers, and asking for a preference from each set. Take a moment to come up with your answers, then see if the Touts agree.

For the rest of the season, would you rather have Sandy Alcantara, Aaron Nola or Joe Ryan? Corbin Burnes, Zac Gallen or Kevin Gausman? Alek Manoah, Chris Sale or Bryce Miller? Mitch Keller, Eduardo Rodriguez or Nathan Eovaldi?

Fred Zinkie (Yahoo/Rotowire, @FredZinkieMLB): Nola, Gausman, Miller, Keller. I would love it if someone tallied all of these answers and posted them!

Doug Dennis (BaseballHQ, @dougdennis41): Nola/Ryan/Alcantara; Gausman/Gallen/Burnes; Sale/Miller/Manoah; Eovaldi/M.Keller/E.Rodriguez. I tried to tell y’all during AFL not to pay extra for “that dog” in Manoah!! 🙂

Brad Johnson (Patreon BaseballATeam, @BaseballATeam): Sandy A., Gallen, uhh… Sale?, and Keller. That third group is tough because I’m averse to all three. As far as I can tell, Sandy is having a normal season but with a bad strand rate. Seems like noise to me. Can’t really go wrong with the second group, though I can’t believe I prefer Burnes least.

Matt Williams (The Game Day, @MattWi77iams): Joe Ryan, Zac Gallen, Chris Sale, and Mitch Keller. My love for Joe Ryan runs too deep.

Michael Govier (FTN Fantasy, @mjgovier): Sandy is my guy and though he has let me down so far, the best of his season is yet to come. Gallen is the easy call for me in group two. Burnes was a guy I was completely out on coming into this year because of some unsubstantiated worries I heard about. Chris Sale is back baby! Though Manoah will improve from here on out, Sale is my choice. The last group is the most challenging because I know that Eduardo can’t be as dominant as he has been, but he also can still be really good. Plus the trade deadline factor may be playing a motivating factor as well. I’ve never been a part of Keller’s Krazies, but outside of his 1st start of the year where he gave up 4 ER, he has only surrendered 3 or less since in every start! Eovaldi has gone off lately, but can he stay healthy? I will go with the guy with the lowest SIERA of the three: Keller.

Rick Graham (Pitcher List, @IAmRickGraham): Alcantara/Gallen/Sale/Keller. I think Sandy was dealing with some bad luck early on, the stuff is still there. Gallen’s the real deal and Sale’s been great 5 of his last 6 starts.

Tim McLeod (PattonandCo, @RunTMcP361): Joe Ryan, Zac Gallen, Bryce Miller, and Mitch Keller.

Scott Swanay (FantasyBaseballSherpa, @fantasy_sherpa): Joe Ryan (best combo of home park and team context) > Sandy Alcantara > Aaron Nola; Gallen (most consistent; improving team context) > Gausman > Burnes; Sale (crapshoot) > Miller > Manoah; Keller (recency bias) > Eovaldi > Rodriguez

Ariel Cohen (CBS Sports, @ATCNY): Aaron Nola. This is a close one – but Nola takes the nod with a higher propensity to win, plenty of strikeouts and a nice floor of ratio production. The next set is also really close … even closer. I’ll go with Gausman, who has the highest likelihood of the three to hold down wins. If ratios were they key though, I’d take Burnes. The next question is Sale … I just see downside and lack of Ks with Manoah, and rookie card for Miller. Sale should be good if healthy. Finally, Eovaldi is an easy call here. Projections have him quite a bit higher, plays for a power offense team, lots of Ks, and high floor. Eovaldi easy.

Brad Johnson (Patreon BaseballATeam, @BaseballATeam): Something maybe everyone hasn’t noticed… since a mid-season adjustment last year, Keller now has a 2.59 ERA (3.21 FIP, 3.47 xFIP) over his last 25 starts. 9.21 K/9, 2.59 BB/9, 0.68 HR/9. Also limiting hard contact about as well as an SP can hope. Those are traits that make both arguments – it looks sustainable, or it could all regress.

Frank Stampfl (SportsGrid, RotoExperts, @Roto_Frank): I had Sandy Alcantara as a bust coming into the season but can’t help but think much better days are coming based on a career-high 14% swinging strike rate and an extremely unlucky 59% strand rate. This next group is very close, but I prefer Zac Gallen. He has the best control of his career and is throwing the curve and cutter more this season, which has led to more whiffs. Chris Sale leads this next group for me. Over his last six starts he has. 3.05 ERA, 0.89 WHIP and 43 strikeouts over 38.1 innings. It’s very close between Mitch Keller and Nathan Eovaldi but give me Keller. He’s less of an injury risk and has finally put everything together thanks to this new cutter.

Chris Towers (CBS Fantasy, @CTowersCBS): I’m still at the point in the season where, absent truly compelling evidence, I’m not going to change my opinion about an elite Fantasy player yet, so I’m taking Alcantara and Nola ahead of Ryan, and I’m taking Burnes over Gallen and Gausman. Of course, the latter is closer, with Gallen and Gausman cracking my top 12 at SP, so I don’t think it’s unreasonable to say Gallen or Gausman have caught him. Sale vs. Manoah is incredibly close for me the rest of the way, though Manoah has certainly given us plenty of reason to change our opinions about him and has fallen considerably as a result. I’m still pretty skeptical of Miller, so that helps make that decision. The latter group is probably the toughest to choose from, but I’ll go with Keller, who deserves a ton of credit for tinkering his way to what looks like a true breakout.

Howard Bender (Fantasy Alarm, @RotoBuzzGuy): Aaron Nola — close with Ryan but I think Nola rights the ship and has a strong rest of the way; Zac Gallen — Save for one bad outing vs PIT, he’s been everything I though he would be before the forearm injury two years ago; Bryce Miller — probably good trade bair because he’ll probably have his innings capped, but I just can’t get behind the other two; Eduardo Rodriguez — here’s hoping he gets dealt to a winning team soon.

Patrick Davitt (BaseballHQ, @patrickdavitt): I’ll take: Ryan, who I think will be a Cy Young frontrunner (then Alcantara, Nola); Gausman, whose track record makes him the choice in the toughest of the four sets (Gallen, Burnes); Sale, whose clunker-gem pattern in the early going has eased into a gem-gem-gem-gem pattern, with a 2.30/0.70 line and 3 wins (Miller, Manoah, who looks lost); and Keller, whose cutter has been part of a comprehensive pitch-mix overhaul that has transformed his performance (Rodriguez, Eovaldi).

Vlad Sedler (FTN Fantasy, @rotogut): Nola, Gallen, Miller, Eovaldi. Should be close between Nola and Ryan from now until the end of the season. Same with Burnes, Gallen and Gausman. I’m not quite ready to put a pin in Burnes’ fantasy value.

Michael A. Stein (Fantasy Judgment, @FantasyJudgment): Alcantara/Gallen/Miller/Keller. The reigning NL Cy Young Award winner will right the ship as the Marlins contend for a wild card spot. Gallen has always been one of my favorite pitchers and he is someone I trust to be consistent. Manoah and Sale concern me, so I am going with rookie Bryce Miller. He has been tremendous thus far, and the Mariners have had a lot of success recently from their young starters that get called up (i.e., Gilbert and Kirby). Finally, Keller is my choice out of attrition because I do not have a lot of faith in Rodriguez or Eovaldi long-term.

Frank Ammirante (The GameDayHQ, @FAmmiranteTFJ): Ryan, Gausman, Sale, Keller. Ryan has taken his game to new heights and looks like an ace. Gausman is showing what he can do with a normalized BABIP. Sale has righted the ship and ahead of Miller due to likely more innings. Keller is the top choice due to improvements in K% and strong Stuff+.

Dave Adler (BaseballHQ, @daveadler01): trying not to project injuries…I see the following as the most likely to come out on top of these troikas – Nola, Gausman, Sale, Eovaldi.

Eric Samulski (Rotoballer, @SamskiNYC): I think the innings and poor defense behind Alcantara are catching up to him and I love Joe Ryan’s new pitch mix, so Ryan for me. Gausman seems the best bet of the next group, but I kinda like all of them. Sale for me in the third group. I’m benching Manoah everywhere now, and I like Bryce Miller but, come on, it’s a rookie with an 80% fastball usage or Chris Sale. And then I’ll take Keller in the last group. The cutter has been a game-changer for dealing with LHH and the sweeper he introduced mid-way through last year has been tremendous

Erik Halterman (Rotowire, @erik_halterman): Ryan is pitching like an ace; his 28.9 K% and 4.1 BB% look much more like Good Nola than the current version of Nola does. Gallen edges out Gausman on tiebreakers such as being five years younger and not pitching in the toughest division in MLB. Sale understandably needed a month but now close enough to himself, but if Miller handles a few stronger lineups like he handled Oakland’s, he could pass Sale and many more. I’m buying that Keller has finally arrived — he’s still top-5 in K-BB% even after a bad outing Friday — but I’m very encouraged by the other two as well.

Lauren Auerbach (Fantrax, @lkauerbach): Joe Ryan, Kevin Gausman, Chris Sale and Mitch Keller. All have K-BB% above 22% and the ERA estimators support their strong starts to the season. Given the unsteady pitching landscape this season, I’d happily roster any of these pitchers rest of season.

Jeff Boggis (Fantasy Football Empire, @JeffBoggis): Joe Ryan MIN, Kevin Gausman TOR, Bryce Miller SEA, and Nathan Eovaldi TEX – SP. I like to spot trends using stat splits at various time increments for the entire season, last 30 days, last 14 days, and last 7 days. Eovaldi has been the best pitcher of the group to date, and he continues to show stat split consistency. I like Kevin Gausman for the strikeouts (85), Bryce Miller for the WHIP (0.51), and Joe Ryan for the wins (7).

Glenn Colton (SiriusXM, @GlennColton1): Nola, Burnes, and Eovaldi are my picks largely because I believe in sticking with the guys with talent and track record. I break away from this pattern for Bryce Miller who just flat out has me convinced. 1.15 ERA and .51 WHIP are too lofty to ignore.

Joe Gallina (Fantasy Alarm, @joegallina): Joe Ryan, Zac Gallen, Bryce Miller and Nathan Eovaldi. I currently roster all four on my Tout squad. I drafted Ryan, Gallen and Eovaldi but the 30 plus percent of my FAAB budget that I spent on Miller has been well worth it and I love his ROS outlook. Miller’s ability to throw strikes, limit walks allowed and avoid giving up home runs has carried over to the major leagues. He pitches his home games in a pitchers ballpark and since he pitched 133 plus innings last season the Mariners aren’t likely to put any limits on his innings pitched this season.

Dylan White (Baseball America, @the__arrival): I think that Chris Sale over Bryce Miller is probably the correct play – who knows how many innings the M’s will let Miller throw this year. (And with respect to Manoah, his command is so shaky right now, it seems like he’s in a position where even if he were to right the ship, he might approach Sale and Miller’s per start production…and that’s only if he rights the ship. I had Eovaldi as a sleeper candidate this year so in the interest of confirmation bias, I continue to choose him over E Rod and Mitch Keller.

Peter Kreutzer (Rotoman.substack.com, @kroyte): I have Alcantara, Gausman, none, and Rodriguez on teams this year, and wish I had Bryce Miller, and that would be a fine foursome. But I have to give the edge to Aaron Nola in the first group, and will stick with Gausman (over Burnes, who I had rated higher in the preseason but who is not right), Miller, and Rodriguez in the other three.

Rudy Gamble (Razzball, @RudyGamble): Joe Ryan, Kevin Gausman, Bryce Miller, Nathan Eovaldi

Chris Clegg (Pitcher List, @RotoClegg): Joe Ryan, Zac Gallen, Chris Sale, Mitch Keller. Joe Ryan has taken his game to another level this season with the splitter and sweeper. Zac Gallen is as steady as they come and we have seen inconsistencies from Corbin Burnes. I would love to say Bryce Miller, but I have concerns about his innings this season, which makes me lean Chris Sale here. Mitch Keller looks like a pitcher I can finally buy into with his decreased four-seam usage and the addition of a cutter and sweeper.

Scott Chu (Pitcher List, @ifthechufits): I was getting a little worried about the limited strikeouts for Nola, but 17 over his last two starts gives me enough hope that this ship is being righted. Nola has been a high-level fantasy starter for four of the last six seasons, and while I really like what Joe Ryan is doing, it’s not easy for young starters to find consistency for extended periods. He struggled through the summer last season after a strong start, and though I don’t think that’s going to happen again, the fact we haven’t had much opportunity to see him string three or four consecutive strong months together has me leaning slightly towards Nola.

Zach Steinhorn (Steinhorn’s Universe on Substack, @zachsteinhorn): Nola, Gausman, Sale, Keller. Manoah was dropped in one of my 12-team mixed leagues and I couldn’t even bring myself to bid on him.

Shelly Verougstraete (NBC Sports EDGE Baseball, @ShellyV_643): 1) Joe Ryan – He has gone from highly deceptive fastball only guy to adding a wicked sweeper while keeping that wicked fastball pitcher. My love for Sandy runs deep but I think both Skip Schuamker and Sandy are thinking this is 2022 instead of 2023. Maybe it is okay if he doesn’t throw eight or nine innings? I have Nola on many fantasy teams and it seems like it one of “those” years for him. 2) Kevin Gausman – Gausman was my pick to win the AL Cy Young and he is helping me not look like idiot. Burnes seems to have lost that ‘edge’ and while I love Gallen…give me Gausman please. 3) Bryce Miller – Just watch all three of these pitchers and the answer is clear. It is amazing how great the Mariners pitching development system is. Sale has looked great but I trust that Miller will be more consistent. And…we don’t talk about Manoah (sadly it doesn’t have the same groove as the Encanto song “We Don’t Talk About Bruno”.) 4) Mitch Keller – This matchup was pretty hard for me to pick but Keller just beat Eovaldi in this matchup. I love how deep Eovaldi is going into games but where are those strikeouts? Keller seems to be the pitcher we all thought we were drafted in previous seasons. I also like what E-Rod is doing but he seems like he is walking on a tightrope at this point.

Phil Hertz (Baseball HQ, @prhz50): Ryan, Gausman, Sale, Keller. Keller was the easiest for me. He’s been excellent since last August. Only caveat is that wins might be elusive if the Buccos revert to pre-2023 form.

Alex Fast (Pitcher List, @AlexFast8): Ryan, Gausman, Miller, Keller. Some difficult (Alcantara / Nola / Ryan). Some easy (Keller / E-Rod / Eovaldi). I think Ryan still has some potential upside if he can figure out the potential slider/sweeper combo while I’m worried about Alcantara and the new shift rules and Nola’s odd year curse (half kidding). Miller has the best four-seamers of any of those guys with fewer injury concerns at the moment and a not-as-scary floor. Keller’s tweaks have proved sustainable and while Eovaldi is a close second, the injury bug is always looming

Todd Zola (Mastersball, @toddzola): Nola, Gausman, Sale, Keller

Hi – Todd Z. here. Chances are by now you’ve figured out I put this thing together. As part of the piece, I posted each poll on my Twitter account (@ToddZola). Here are the results, side by side with the Touts picks.

Tout Daily: Three Golden Tickets Up for Grabs

It’s the fourth week of Period 2, so by the end of the evening, three more entries into the championship tournament will be awarded. Here are some of the players the Touts hope deliver.

Jeff Boggis (Fantasy Football Empire, @JeffBoggis)

Pitcher: Spencer Strider – Spencer Strider is coming off a season low 7 strikeouts in his last outing. I’d like to see him go deeper than 5 innings tonight to be worth his $12,300 salary. He’s still averaging 26.4 fantasy points per game. Playing for pride tonight, but you never know.

Hitter: Aaron Judge – Aaron Judge has been on fire since returning from the IL. He’s produced double digit fantasy points in 7 out of his last 8 contests and has exceeded 30 fantasy points in 2 of these contests. At a salary of $6,300, he’s priced to perfection, but that’s what I need tonight.

Howard Bender (Fantasy Alarm, @RotoBuzzGuy)

Pitcher: Bobby Miller – Why wouldn’t you want to go with the rookie? Because he’s facing a tough Braves lineup? Pfffffft! Stare death in the face and laugh!

Hitter: Jorge Soler – In Coors against a lefty? Yum!

Phil Hertz (Baseball HQ, @prhz50)

Pitcher: Eduardo Rodriguez – With one exception, he’s been very good of late. Reasonable price versus Royals. Why not.

Hitter: Aaron Judge – 1.463 OPS over his last 10 games. Nuff said.

Erik Halterman (Rotowire, @erik_halterman)

Pitcher: Eduardo Rodriguez – To Bobby Miller or not to Bobby Miller is the question of the day for me. Count me as more scared of his opponent than excited by his price, so I’ll go with a boring, mid-priced veteran with a great matchup against the Royals instead.

Hitter: Eduardo Escobar – Gotta collect all the Eduardos. Escobar had a -5 wRC+ in his first 12 games, but his 178 wRC+ since then suggests he’s not totally cooked. I wouldn’t expect more than league-average performance going forward, but league-average from a $2,500 player who’s batting second for a good lineup is a steal.

Sara Sanchez (bleedcubbieblue.com, @BCB_Sara)

Pitcher: Gerrit Cole – He’s been so good this season, I went back and forth between him and Strider tonight but the extra few dollars allowed me to tweak my hitters in ways that I *think* will really help, so I’m going to roll with Cole tonight. Plus the Dodgers have some really hot hitters right now and it made me nervous, even though Strider rules and I’m starting him in every league I have him in this week.

Hitter: Jared Kelenic – Kelenic has had a great year, and starting Cole instead of Strider let me pick him up as an OF option. The Mariners face off against the As tonight, which is only slightly less good that hitting in Coors, so I went with Kelenic tonight.

Todd Zola (Mastersball, @toddzola)

Pitcher: Gerrit Cole – Cole and Strider and I’ll figure the rest out.

Hitter: Joge Soler – OK, Cole, Strider and Soler and I’ll figure the rest out. I should probably fade the chalk, but then I should also fade pizza. Though, it looks like Judge is getting attention, so fading Judge works, since I trust a platoon edge in Coors for a guy who is comfy vs. LHP over a non-predictive streak.

Steve Gardner (USA TODAY Sports, @SteveAGardner)

Pitcher: Yu Darvish – It hasn’t been a great season, but Darvish gets strikeouts even if he’s a little off his game. The Nats will help him get back in a groove.

Hitter: Nelson Cruz – A sneaky $3000 pick at first base, Cruz enjoys hitting against left-handers and you can’t discount the revenge factor (!) in his return to Washington.