The Weekly Planner – 5/8 – 5/14

For the past five-plus years, I’ve contributed The Week Ahead and Impact Report at Rotoworld. Those articles included a look at two-start pitchers, streamers, waiver pickups, and injuries. Many readers planned their week and FAAB deadlines around those articles, so my plan is to contribute something similar weekly throughout the 2023 season in this space.

If there’s something else you’d like to see, please let me know in the comments section.

 

Two Start Pitchers

American League

Strong Plays

Shane McClanahan: @BAL, @NYY

Dylan Cease: @KC, HOU

Tanner Bibee: DET, LAA

Lucas Giolito: @KC, HOU

Hunter Brown: @LAA, @CHW

Logan Gilbert: TEX, @DET

 

Decent Plays

Zach Eflin: @BAL, @NYY

Jon Gray: @SEA, @OAK

Nestor Cortes: OAK, TB

Kyle Gibson: TB, PIT

Louie Varland: SD, CHC

Andrew Heaney: @SEA, @OAK

Zack Greinke: CHW, @MIL

 

At Your Own Risk

JP Sears: @NYY, TEX

Clarke Schmidt: OAK, TB

Jordan Lyles: CHW, @MIL

Michael Lorenzen: @CLE, SEA

Drew Rucinski: @NYY, TEX

 

National League

Strong Plays

Zac Gallen: MIA, SF

Logan Webb: WAS, @ARI

Mitch Keller: COL, @BAL

Anthony DeSclafani: WAS, @ARI

Max Scherzer: @CIN, @WAS

 

 

Decent Plays

Marcus Stroman: STL, @MIN

Charlie Morton: BOS, @TOR

Miles Mikolas: @CHC, @BOS

Brandon Pfaadt: MIA, SF

Tony Gonsolin: @MIL, SD

Braxton Garrett: @ARI, CIN

 

At Your Own Risk

Michael Wacha: @MIN, @LAD

Kyle Freeland: @PIT, PHI

Jake Irvin: @SF, NYM

Luke Weaver: NYM, @MIA

 

Streamers

These are pitchers I’m considering as single-start streamers this week in a 12-15 team mixed league that are available in at least 50% of leagues.

American League

Jhony Brito: OAK (5/10)

Mike Clevinger: @KC (5/11)

Kyle Bradish: PIT (5/12)

 

National League

Antonio Senzatela: @PIT (5/10)

Rich Hill: COL (5/10)

Sean Manaea: WAS (5/10)

Tommy Henry: SF (5/11)

Adrian Houser: KC (5/14)

 

Player Notes

  • The JJ Bleday-for-AJ Puk swap between Oakland and Miami is turning into one of the most interesting trades of the spring. Puk has emerged as the Marlins closer, while Bleday suddenly looks like a real player after struggling prior to this season. The former fourth overall pick in the draft, Bleday was called up to play regularly for the A’s after a great start to his season at Triple-A. There’s reason to believe he’s made real adjustments with his new organization, as well. Bleday struck out 27% of the time at Triple-A last season, but that rate was down to sub-13% in 119 plate appearances before he was promoted. His inability to make contact has been a huge culprit for his inability to hit for average, including a .228 batting average at Triple-A last season. There has never been a question that the 25-year-old had a power of an MLB corner outfielder, including 25 home runs between Triple-A and the majors last year. While I’m not quite ready to go all-in based on the still relatively small sample size, Bleday is an interesting flier in mixed leagues.
  • Royals infielder Maikel Garcia appears to be another call-up worthy of attention. The undersized infielder has started off hot with the Royals, just as he did when he got called up in September. There was some trepidation with the bat after a slow start at Omaha, hitting only .242 in 112 plate appearances, but Garcia performed much better at that level in 186 plate appearances last season hitting .274-7-28 with 12 steals in 40 games. There are two other developments worth watching in his game. Garcia has been more patient this season (16 walks in 22 games at Triple-A, and the power has started to develop over the last year. He hit 11 home runs last season and carried that power surge into the Venezuelan Winter League, with four homers. Logically, there’s nothing standing in the way of Garcia seeing regular at-bats as the team’s third baseman the rest of the way, and his excellent base stealing skills give Garcia a high fantasy ceiling.
  • Of course, Cubs first baseman Matt Mervis was the most anticipated prospect called up this week and for good reason based on what he’s done since the start of last season. The Duke alum hit .309-36-119 between three levels last season, and he’s picked up where he left off hitting .286-6-27 in only 112 plate appearances at Iowa. Eric Hosmer’s addition was clearly a stand-in for Mervis, who continues to show plus power and solid contact for a power hitter. The only major limitation worth watching is his spot in the batting order, hitting seventh in his first two games. It should also be noted that he’s probably not the best first base prospect to be promoted before the All-Star break, as Reds first base prospect Christian Encarnacion-Strand has been tearing the cover off the ball at Triple-A since returning from injury and should be up whenever the Reds have had enough of their current first base experiments.
  • Bryce Miller is one of the more interesting FAAB pickups of the week, and his price is fluid with his first start against a real lineup (Houston) coming today after dominating Oakland in his debut. The hype about his fastball is real. It averaged 95 mph in his debut, and he threw the pitch 70% of the time. With the heavy usage and lack of great secondary stuff, the concern comes when he faces the league for the second time. Miller is an extreme flyball pitcher who struggled with the long ball in his four starts at Double-A earlier this season, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see some blowups and a highly variable ERA this season.
  • Pierce Johnson remains the clear closer in Colorado despite the return of Daniel Bard. The Denver native has converted two saves this week and has continued to miss bats on command after missing most of last season in San Diego due to injury. He currently has a career-high 13.5 K/9. There are some red flags with a 5.4 BB/9 and home run issues, but the curveball-fastball combo is working just fine overall. Bard is easily the highest paid reliever in the Rox pen, but Bud Black has yet to use him in anything close to a high-leverage situation and it remains to be seen if that will change.
  • During the offseason, I saw a lot of what I felt to be misguided speculation that groundball pitchers would be penalized by the lack of shifts. This idea came with an assumption that MLB would be using the same “dead” ball as last season, which was a very risky bet. It appears we’ve reverted back to something closer to the 2019 ball, and thus groundball pitchers have been a savior for many fantasy squads with a high floor and fewer blowups, as much of the Giants starting rotation can attest. That brings me to a pitcher coming back from injury and worth watching. Milwaukee groundball specialist Adrian Houser has a career 54% groundball grate that was much higher in 2020-2021 when he was pitching some of his best baseball. Houser doesn’t miss many bats, with a mediocre career 7.2 K/9, but his ability to provoke groundballs has made him a serviceable backend starting pitcher and someone worth watching if he looks strong in his season debut today.

Kansas City Royals Prospects 2023

Overall Grade: D

The Royals had some very significant prospect graduations last year, leaving the farm system in a not-great state. They will need the 2022 draft class to pan out, led by the top prospect in the system.

Name PosAge Level ETAGradeComments
Gavin CrossOF21A-2024A-9th overall pick, very good debut. 5 cat
Tyler GentryOF23AA2023B+Breakout year. Elite BA and solid pop.
Noah CameronSP22A+2024B+Elite K/BB, becoming a pitcher to watch.
Diego HernandezOF21AA2024BGood speed and BA.
Angel ZerpaSP22MLB2022C+Solid K/BB, had some injury issues.
Beck WaySP22A+2024C+Solid K rate and success, acquired from NYY.
Alec MarshSP24AAA2023CHorrendous at AA, but solid strikeout numbers. RP pending.
Drew WatersOF23MLB2022CPlayed better after trade, but small sample size. Tools but risky.
Nick LoftinOF/3B23AAA2023C1st round pick, has some pop and speed but mediocre year.
Nate EatonOF/3B25MLB2022C-Some pop and speed. Potential off the bench.
Peyton Wilson2B/OF22A+2024C-Some pop and speed, former 2nd round pick.
Luca TreshC22AA2023C-Solid pop and OBP.
Maikel GarciaSS22MLB2022C-Very good speed, and some BA potential.
Tucker BradleyOF24AA2023D+Solid BA, probably not enough power or speed.

Fantasy Baseball Shortstop Rankings 2023

Updated 01/21/23

Rankings based on 15-team mixed, standard roto-scoring leagues.

Rating: 1-5, 5 is likely improvement, 1 is likely decline

Status: Sleeper (S), Deep Sleeper (DS), Bust (B)

RankNameLgTeamPosCommentsRatingStatus
1Trea TurnerNPHISSDurable in four of five years. No big changes. Led league in PA. Would expect speed to decline soon.3
2Bobby WittAKCRSSExtreme LA and elite speed. Worst in second half. Finished year hitting second.3
3Bo BichetteATORSSStreaky, hit .406-7-27 in September. EV and HH% were up. Mediocre speed makes 2021 SB a fluke.3
4Fernando Tatis JR.NSDPSS
5Amed RosarioACLESSCut K%, elite speed. Slow starter again. Hit 2nd, lineup spot really matters.3
6Tim AndersonACHWSSCut K% sharply, but power also down. Missed time with groin and thumb.3
7Francisco LindorNNYMSSK% remained up and speed is in decline.2
8Xander BogaertsNSDPSSHR% worst since 2017, power returned late. EV down significantly but played through injury.3
9Oneil CruzNPITSSElite EV and speed. 34% K, huge September. High-risk, high-reward.3
10Ezequiel TovarNCOLSSBreakout at AA, clear 20/20 ability. Could be favorable price.3S
11Wander FrancoATBRSS10% K, chronic injuries but looked great in April and September.3
12Dansby SwansonNCHCSSSuper durable in three consecutive years. HR% about the same for three years. EV was up. Price is solely for PT.3
13Nico HoernerNCHCSSK% down to 11%, increased LA. Struggled in second half. Has probably reached ceiling unless he's promoted in lineup.3
14Willy AdamesNMILSSFB% from 2021 held. Showing strong growth. XBA in line with real.3
15Corey SeagerATEXSSSecond best HR% of career. .283 xBA. Slowed a bit in second half.3
16Jeremy PenaAHOUSSSmashed LHP, hot in September and playoffs. Elite speed.3
17Carlos CorreaAMINSSAlmost no change, BA was a fluke.3
18CJ AbramsNWSNSSAwful walk rate, didn't improve in WAS. Ended year hitting 2nd and 91 speed.3
19Jorge MateoABALSSHigh LA and elite speed. Defense could keep him as starter.3
20Javier BaezADETSSSecond best K% of career. Better in second half but still not great, EV well down. Speed down. Clear decline.3
21Elvis AndrusAFASSPower rebound with White Sox, increased LA. Speed has tanked.3
22Ha-Seong KimNSDPSSHigh LA, made progress in second half. Still not a regular.3
23Isiah Kiner-FalefaANYYSS14% K, showed some pop in September.3
24J.P. CrawfordASEASS13% K but horrendous EV. Demoted in lineup late in year.3
25Royce LewisAMINSSSecond torn ACL, very impressive when he played.4
26Brandon CrawfordNSFGSSFought knee problem, no sign of 2021 numbers.2
27Adalberto MondesiAKCRSSTorn ACL, speed already tanked.2
28Jose IglesiasNFASSHit better on the road than at Coors. Still strong contact.3
29Oswald PerazaANYYSSSome pop and elite speed. Didn't hit the ball hard, and BA has been mediocre.3
30Anthony VolpeANYYSS
31Miguel RojasNLADSSEv bad in b2b years but making contact.3
32Brice TurangNMILSS
33Dylan MooreASEASSSB skills better than actual speed, 29% K.3
34Kyle FarmerAMINSSSlammed LHP, likely to be his role.3
35Ryan KreidlerADETSSHas some pop and speed.3
36Elly De La CruzNCINSS
37Mauricio DubonAHOUSSMuch improved K% but didn't hit RHP. Somewhat interesting.3
38Jordan WestburgABALSS
39Alan TrejoNCOLSSSome pop but nothing else.3
40Nick AhmedNARISSShoulder surgery in June. Was terrible in 2021.2
41Edmundo SosaNPHISS
42Jose RodriguezACHWSS
43Jose BarreroNCINSS44% K, fractured hamate bone. 2021 was only showing of upside, but was good enough to be worthy flier.3
44Garrett HampsonNMIASSOnly hit LHP.3
45Maikel GarciaAKCRSSGood speed and has hit for BA. Interesting stash.3
46David HamiltonABOSSS
47Geraldo PerdomoNARISSGood defense and speed. Can't hit.2
48Blaze AlexanderNARISS
49Otto LopezATORSSSolid BA and can run.3
50Austin MartinAMINSS
51Zach NetoALAASS
52Danny MendickNNYMSS
53Masyn WinnNSTLSS
54Paul DeJongNSTLSS33% K worst by far. Looks finished.2
55Brayan RocchioACLESS
56Matt McLainNCINSS
57Liover PegueroNPITSS
58Zack ShortADETSS
59Andrew VelazquezALAASSAll defense and speed. 34% K.2
60Ronny MauricioNNYMSS
61Addison BargerATORSS
62Jordan LawlarNARISS
63Johan CamargoAMINSS
64Joey OrtizABALSS
65Jermaine PalaciosADETSSHas pop and speed. Overmatched initially.3
66Vinny CapraATORSSDisciplined and has hit for BA.3
67Braden ShewmakeNATLSS
68Jacob AmayaNLADSS