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We're past the trade deadline and into August, and now it's just a dead sprint to the end of the regular season in your H2H points leagues, with just two months left in your Roto leagues as well. And, if you're trying to figure out where the Fantasy landscape has shifted after the deadline -- and maybe want to make a few moves before your own trade deadlines pass -- you'll want to start with my Trade Values Chart here, which has my latest rankings for both H2H and Roto scoring for about the top 200 players or so.

You can also get a few more opinions by heading to our rankings page, where Scott White and Frank Stampfl's rankings for each position reside alongside my own. While I can't speak for Frank or Scott, I can tell you that Ranger Suarez, Garrett Crochet, Jordan Hicks, and Max Scherzer are all among the biggest fallers in my rankings over the past week. And on the hitting side, Jackson Holliday, Victor Robles, Xavier Edwards, and Miguel Vargas are all among the biggest risers; I'll also add that Pablo Lopez is back in my top 12 after correcting things in the month of July. 

Thursday's waiver targets

Before we get to the rest of the waiver-wire targets from Wednesday's action, let's start with a speculative add who has to be close to getting the call … right?

Orioles third baseman Coby Mayo, Scott White's No. 2 prospect remaining in the minors, continues to patiently bide his time, waiting for the call for his MLB debut. It didn't come when the Orioles moved Connor Norby at the trade deadline Tuesday, and it didn't come Wednesday when Jordan Westburg suffered a fractured hand that has his availability for the remainder of the regular season in question – the Orioles called up infielder Livan Soto, acquired in a trade with the Reds Tuesday, instead. 

What more does Mayo have to do at this point? The 22-year-old has played 75 games at Triple-A this season, hitting .293/.366/.578, and now has 32 homers and 114 RBI in 137 career games at Triple-A. He's well-seasoned at this point – I mean, my goodness, I put too much salt on pretty much everything I cook, and even I think the Orioles might be over-seasoning him at this point. There have been plenty of opportunities for them to call Mayo up and it hasn't come yet, which raises several questions that may or may not be fair. Are the Orioles holding Mayo down for service-time related reasons, or do they just not like him as much as everyone else seems to?

I think the former question is probably more likely to be in the right direction than the latter, and I also think we're very close to the point where it becomes a non-question. The Orioles don't exactly have a pressing need for another bat right now, but this is also absolutely one of the handful of teams with a legitimate chance to win a World Series right now, and they're only 0.5 games up on the Yankees for the NL East, so it's not like they have some gigantic cushion. Their margin for error is pretty wide as far as these things go, but they should be prioritizing winning right now over potentially having an extra year of club control in seven years … right?

Mayo is rostered in 52% of CBS Fantasy leagues, and I'd go ahead and add him where he isn't right now, in anticipation of a callup at some point soon. It has to be soon … right? 

Colton Cowser, OF, Orioles (72%) – Cowser's usage has been a source of some frustration this season, but it's hard to have too many complaints right now. He has started five games and been the leadoff hitter in all five, and he's been mashing since the All-Star break, hitting four homers and combining for 25 runs and RBI, and a couple of steals in 13 games. With this hot streak, I think he's back to being must-add where available. 

Matt Wallner, OF, Twins (13%) – So, here's the tough thing about Wallner: He's been absolutely red hot since getting recalled from the majors, hitting his fifth homer in 15 games Wednesday to push his season OPS all the way to .990. Of course, he's also struck out 43% of the time for the season, a mark he has only lowered to 37% since being recalled. The power is legitimate, but Wallner still strikes out too much to be able to rely on outside of deeper category leagues where you need power specifically. 

Freddy Fermin, C, Royals (6%) – Having Fantasy relevance as a No. 2 catcher is tough, but with Salvador Perez in his mid-30s, there have been increasingly more opportunities for Fermin to play of late, and it's not just with Perez seeing time at DH. Fermin was the DH Wednesday, and he has started six of the past eight games and 15 of 21 since July 4. It helps that Fermin is hitting .345 with an .876 OPS in the month of July, of course, but we're deep into the dog days of summer, and keeping Perez fresh for the playoff run is going to keep Fermin in the lineup more often than not. For a guy hitting .286/.332/.440 since the start of last season, that's enough to keep him relevant as a No. 2 catcher. 

Jake McCarthy, OF, Diamondbacks (14%) – McCarthy is largely forgotten in Fantasy circles, and he still isn't playing quite every day – though he has started eight of 12 since the All-Star break. But he's gotta be forcing the Diamondbacks' hand with his play of late. McCarthy went 3 for 4 Wednesday against the Nationals and is now hitting .294 for the season with 14 steals. The upside here is limited because McCarthy just isn't an everyday player, but if you need speed and batting average, he can certainly provide those two things. 

Calvin Faucher, RP, Marlins (2%) – Faucher didn't get the save Wednesday, but it kinda looks like that was the role, right? Andrew Nardi, one of the expected contenders for saves, worked the sixth inning with a two-run lead, then Anthony Bender (another potential closer) worked the eighth with a four-run lead. Faucher then worked a clean ninth, striking out one on 14 pitches. Now, it wasn't a save situation after the Marlins added two runs in the seventh inning, so maybe it's nothing. But if you're speculating on saves, it seems reasonable enough to assume things are leaning Faucher's way right now, at least.