The Fantasy Baseball Hitting Planner is your guide to setting your lineup for the upcoming scoring period. Every week, we'll give you the latest on injuries, lineup changes, streaks and matchups, highlighting the players at each position who might surprise or disappoint as a result. NOTE: The Planner will be updated with the latest information every Sunday prior to lineup deadlines.
Any players not listed here fall into the "status quo" category, meaning you should take your usual approach with them.
All statistics are updated through Saturday, April 30.
Catcher
Wilson Ramos' two-homer game Tuesday could initiate a changing of the guard at catcher for the Nationals. Ramos, who opened the season alternating starts with future Hall of Famer Ivan Rodriguez, has started four of the last five games. The most he had played previously was two games in a row. The Nationals have all but said he's going to take over as the starting catcher at some point this season, and when that happens, he has the upside to make a contribution even in mixed leagues. This could be the start of it.
Must-Start Options: Buster Posey, Brian McCann, Carlos Santana, Miguel Montero, Russell Martin
Heating up
Wilson Ramos: .359
(14 for 39), 2 HRs, 1.050 OPS in 13 games
Yadier Molina: .395 (17 for 43), 1 HR, 8 RBI, 1 SB in 12 games
Miguel Olivo: .364 (8 for 22), 2 HRs, seven runs scored in five games
Cooling off
Jorge Posada: .057
(2 for 35), 1 HR, 10 Ks in 11 games
Geovany Soto: .111 (3 for 27), 1 HR in eight games
John Buck: .087 (2 for 23), 1 HR in eight games
Nick Hundley: .120 (3 for 25), .414 OPS in seven games
Worth a second look
Alex Avila
(68 percent started): Avila hasn't made much noise in Fantasy
since his three homers in four games back in early April, but he hasn't
faded either, batting .379 (11 for 29) over his last eight games. A
favorable schedule against pitchers like Bartolo Colon, Freddy Garcia, Kyle Drabek, Jesse Litsch and Jo-Jo Reyes during a seven-game week only gives you more incentive to
start a high-upside player like him.
Kurt Suzuki (59 percent): No team has better matchups this
week than the Athletics, who draw the Indians pitching staff, which is
sure to fade sooner or later, and the Royals pitching staff, which
already has. Suzuki entered the season as a top-10 Fantasy catcher for a
reason, so he's going to come around sooner or later. Now seems like an
opportune time, especially after he hit his first homer Saturday.
Approach with caution
Matt Wieters
(91 percent started): Wieters has been putting up good numbers
since altering his batting stance, batting .324 (12 for 37) with three
home runs over his last 11 games, and is seemingly on the verge of
must-start status. But this week will be a tough test for him. He has
always struggled against left-handers, posting an OPS 180 points lower
against them last year and 134 points lower for his career. The Orioles
face four left-handers this week. That doesn't necessarily mean you
should bench Wieters, but if you already have a dilemma at the position,
that could be your tiebreaker.
Jorge Posada
(63 percent): Posada has six homers this season, which is what's
keeping him in Fantasy lineups, but he has only nine hits total, which
is what should take him out. He's a DH now, so if he continues to
struggle, the Yankees can experiment with other options. You shouldn't
necessarily give up on him, but you should keep an eye out for viable
alternatives.
Injury concerns
Victor Martinez,
who has been on the DL since April 19 because of a groin injury, will
begin a rehab assignment Monday and should be able to return from the DL
when eligible Wednesday. Unless that timetable changes over the weekend,
you should plan on activating him in Fantasy. He's a proven stud at the
catcher position, so five games from him is better than six or seven
games from an alternative off the waiver wire ... Carlos Ruiz left Wednesday's game with a tight lower back. The injury
isn't considered serious enough for him to go on the DL, but it could
sideline him into this week. As cold as he's been lately, this injury
just gives you another reason to sit him in mixed leagues.
First base
More and more, the Rangers are moving toward playing Mitch Moreland every day, starting him 18 of the last 20 games. Seven of his last 11 starts have come in the outfield, which is a product of Josh Hamilton's injury, but it's still a promising development. Moreland's percentages would make him an instant hit in mixed leagues if given the opportunity to play every day, so perhaps now is the time to make a move for him. Meanwhile, Mark Trumbo has been losing at-bats with the promotion of Alexi Amarista in Los Angeles. Amarista has gotten some starts at second base, moving Howard Kendrick to first and bumping Trumbo out of the lineup. Trumbo's recent slump might have something to do with it, but this is just another reason why he's strictly an AL-only option. Steve Pearce has been spelling Lyle Overbay against left-handers in Pittsburgh lately, more or less ruining whatever little mixed-league appeal Overbay had.
Must-Start Options: Albert Pujols, Miguel Cabrera, Joey Votto, Mark Teixeira, Prince Fielder, Adrian Gonzalez, Buster Posey, Ryan Howard, Lance Berkman, Ike Davis, Alex Gordon
Heating up
Ike Davis: .419
(18 for 43), 4 HRs, 1.283 OPS in 12 games
Brett Wallace: .571 (16 for 29), 7 2Bs, 1.377 OPS in 10 games
Adrian Gonzalez: .480 (12 for 25), 5 2Bs, 1.180 OPS in six games
Adam Lind: .429 (9 for 21), 3 HRs, 9 RBI in five games
Cooling off
Adam Dunn: .120 (6
for 50), one extra-base hit, 22 Ks in 14 games
Aubrey Huff: .097 (3 for 31), .300 OPS in nine games
Adam LaRoche: .053 (1 for 19), .205 OPS in five games
Worth a second look
Adam Lind (77
percent started): Just when some people were ready to write off
Lind, he exploded with two homers Tuesday and followed that performance
with another homer Thursday. If he's back on the right side of streaky,
he has a good opportunity to continue the run this week. Left-handers
are his kryptonite, and the Blue Jays have only one on the schedule,
facing the back end of the Rays and Tigers pitching staffs.
Justin Smoak (41 percent): Smoak, who homered in his last game
before taking a personal leave, homered in each of his two games back.
He has been one of the more underrated players in Fantasy this season,
posting a .920 OPS. As a former elite prospect, he's worth a shot while
hot.
Brett Wallace (28 percent):
Wallace has more hits than some players have at-bats over the last week,
and he's doing it against righties and lefties. He's seeing the ball
better after moving back in the batter's box and is living up to the
potential that made him the prize of the three-way Roy Oswalt deal last year. He hasn't been hitting many homers,
which might scare some mixed-league owners away, but he's a sleeper for
all formats.
Approach with caution
Justin Morneau
(83 percent started): Morneau has a couple multi-hit game since
returning from the flu April 23, but before you declare his early-season
slump over, keep in mind he has only one extra-base hit during that
seven-game stretch. He still has yet to homer and still has plenty of
questions to answer as he works his way back from last season's
concussion. In a five-game week, with pitchers like John Danks, John Lackey, Clay Buchholz and Jon Lester on the
schedule, you might want to give him a little more time to prove himself.
Freddie Freeman (37 percent): Freeman has been up and down so
far in his rookie season, and it seems to have little to do with the
matchups. But during this latest down period, during which he's batting
.100 (3 for 30), he's set to face Yovani Gallardo,
Zack Greinke, Shaun Marcum, Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee and Cole Hamels (or Roy Oswalt). Sounds like plenty of reason to bench him.
Injury concerns
None.
Second base
Michael Young, who has played all over the Rangers infield in between DH duty, has gained eligibility at second base in standard CBSSports.com leagues -- something he hasn't had since 2004. You're more likely to start him at third base than second, probably, but the versatility only improves his value. Alexi Amarista, who has hit over .300 throughout his minor-league career, has come up from the minors and gotten a couple starts for the Angels. He's unlikely to play every day since doing so means bumping Mark Trumbo from the lineup, but he's an intriguing source of speed and gap power for AL-only owners.
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Player | % increase | |
1. | Darwin Barney, SS, Cubs | 36 |
2. | Ryan Roberts, 2B, D-Backs | 33 |
3. | Alex Avila, C, Tigers | 24 |
4. | Sam Fuld, OF, Rays | 21 |
5. | Jeff Francoeur, OF, Royals | 19 |
6. | Chris Coghlan, OF, Marlins | 15 |
7. | Brett Wallace, 1B, Astros | 14 |
8. | Johnny Damon, OF, Rays | 12 |
9. | Brennan Boesch, OF, Tigers | 11 |
10. | Jed Lowrie, SS, Red Sox | 10 |
Must-Start Options: Robinson Cano, Dustin Pedroia, Ian Kinsler, Dan Uggla, Rickie Weeks, Brandon Phillips, Michael Young, Ben Zobrist
Heating up
Brandon Phillips:
.378 (14 for 37), 2 HRs, 1.101 OPS in nine games
Ben Zobrist: .448 (13 for 29), 4 HRs, 3 SBs, 1.521 OPS in seven
games
Rickie Weeks: .417 (10 for 24),
2 HRs, .833 SLG in six games
Howard Kendrick:
.500 (10 for 20), 3 2Bs in five games
Cooling off
Gordon Beckham:
.089 (4 for 45), no extra-base hits, .198 OPS in 13 games
Dustin Pedroia: .094 (3 for 32), no extra-base hits, 2 SBs in eight
games
Danny Espinosa: .083 (2 for
24), .269 OPS in six games
Worth a second look
Freddy Sanchez
(42 percent started): Sanchez has landed on this list so many
times already that he's in danger of getting more attention than he
deserves. He has little power or speed and, therefore, little upside.
But he's a hit machine when he gets going and has already had a couple
hot streaks this year. With good matchups this week against pitchers
like Tom Gorzelanny, R.A. Dickey, Chris Capuano, Mike Pelfrey and Esmil Rogers, he
could be in line for another.
Ryan Raburn
(39 percent): Raburn, like Michael Young,
has gained eligibility at second base in standard CBSSports.com leagues
over the last week, and it's a bigger development for him since he was
previously just an outfielder. Now that he's playing every day,
splitting time with Will Rhymes and Casper Wells between second base and the outfield, his power potential
gives him plenty of sleeper appeal, and you have to like his matchups
against the back end of the Yankees and Blue Jays staffs.
Approach with caution
Danny Espinosa
(39 percent started): Espinosa has cooled off after his hot
start, and considering his strikeout rate in both the majors and the
minors, his cold streaks could last a while. A player with his profile
likely has some growing pains ahead, so he's only worth starting when
hot.
Daniel Murphy (10 percent):
Murphy isn't widely owned yet, but just in case his hot streak -- he's
batting .342 (13 for 38) with two homers over his last 11 games -- had
you thinking of adding him to your lineup, think again. Granted, he has
shown enough offensive ability over his career to deserve a look in
Fantasy at some point, but with Tim Lincecum,
Jonathan Sanchez, Hiroki Kuroda and Clayton Kershaw on
the schedule, this week isn't the time.
Injury concerns
Aaron Hill,
who recently went on the DL with a strained right hamstring, is eligible
to return later this week. The Blue Jays haven't given an official
timetable for his return, though, so you shouldn't be particularly
optimistic about him making a Fantasy contribution. He was off to a slow
start this season anyway, so just keep him reserved.
Third base
After playing less than two full games so far this season, Evan Longoria is finally ready to contribute for the many Fantasy owners who invested a first-round pick in him. He has begun rehabbing from a strained oblique at Double-A Montgomery and will return from the disabled list Tuesday for the start of the Rays' six-game week. Obviously, given his potential as the consensus No. 1 third baseman in Fantasy, you'll want to get him active right away. No need to wait for him to prove healthy and effective first.
Must-Start Options: Alex Rodriguez, David Wright, Adrian Beltre, Michael Young
Heating up
Placido Polanco:
.410 (41 for 100), 2 HRs, 3 SBs, .995 OPS in 25 games
Michael Young: .378 (31 for 82), 1 HR, 1 3B, 9 2Bs, 3 SBs in 20 games
Jack Hannahan: .355 (11 for 31), 2 HRs, 1 SB, 1.057 OPS in nine games
Chone Figgins: .409 (9 for 22), 1 3B, 1 2B, 1 SB, 1.004 OPS in five
games
Cooling off
Mark Reynolds:
.075 (3 for 40), 1 HR, 12 Ks in 12 games
Chris Johnson: .129 (4 for 31), 1 HR, .387 OPS in eight games
Alex Rodriguez: .130 (3 for 23), .405 OPS in six games
Worth a second look
Mark Reynolds
(58 percent started): Reynolds' slow start isn't such a surprise
considering his high strikeout rate, but his BABIP so far is more than
100 points lower than usual. He's due to break out in a big way, and
with four left-handers on schedule -- ones like Mark Buehrle, Jeff Francis and Bruce Chen -- this week could be the time. His OPS was .913 against
lefties last year compared to .694 against righties.
Chone Figgins (50 percent): For a non-power hitter, Figgins
has been awfully streaky over his career, as his .322 (37 for 115)
batting average last September shows. He has been a non-factor in
Fantasy so far, but coming off four straight multi-hit games, he could
be on the verge of turning it around. With the injuries mounting at
third base, time to turn back to Figgins in Fantasy.
Approach with caution
Pedro Alvarez
(47 percent started): Alvarez's struggles are well-documented.
He's striking out every third at-bat and has only one homer. The Pirates
have already sat him a couple times for Steve Pearce against tougher left-handers and now have another
platoon option in Brandon Wood. With
three left-handers on the schedule this week, Alvarez might not get as
many opportunities to break out for his Fantasy owners.
Alberto Callaspo (34 percent): Callaspo has shown some signs of
life over the weekend, but he's still batting just .261 (18 for 69) with
one extra-base hit over his last 19 games. With Maicer Izturis back from a hamstring injury and Erick Aybar back from a strained oblique, the Angels infield is
suddenly more crowded than ever. If Callaspo plays less than every day,
his modest production won't be nearly as intriguing in mixed leagues.
Injury concerns
Kevin Youkilis
hurt his left hip on a slide Thursday and aggravated the injury
Saturday. The Red Sox sat him on Sunday but don't think the injury will
linger. Still, if Youkilis ends up sitting out another game or two, it
wouldn't be the biggest surprise in the world. Because the Red Sox have
seven games on the schedule this week, he still has a chance of playing
five or six, so you should probably keep the elite player active ... Ryan Zimmerman, who hasn't played since April 9 because of an
abdominal injury, needs surgery and will miss about six weeks. You have
to keep an elite player like him stashed, obviously, but his return
isn't as close as you were orginally led to believe ... Pablo Sandoval fractured his right wrist on a swing over the weekend
and will miss 4-6 weeks. Mike Fontenot
figures to take his place in the lineup, but he hasn't offered much in
his past opportunities to play every day. You can leave him for NL-only
leagues ... David Freese fractured his
left hand when he got hit by a pitch Sunday and is almost sure to go on
the DL. Daniel Descalso, who was
spelling him regularly anyway, will likely start in his absence, but he
doesn't have enough upside for mixed-league use ... Juan Uribe will move to third base with Casey Blake going on the DL with an infection in his right elbow,
opening the door for Aaron Miles to play
second base regularly. He's a light hitter who isn't worth owning
outside of NL-only leagues ... Ty Wigginton
is in line for more at-bats with Ian Stewart
in the minors and Jose Lopez struggling,
but he hurt his oblique on a slide Tuesday. The injury seems like a
minor one right now, but oblique injuries often turn out worse than
initially expected. Since he's more of a sleeper than an every-week
option, you should plan to reserve him ... Scott Rolen, who is on the DL with a strained left shoulder, could
return for the weekend of Fantasy Week 5 (May 2-8), but since he's just
a fringe option even when healthy, you wouldn't want to start him for
only half a week. Miguel Cairo has been
starting in his absence.
Shortstop
Former elite prospect Brandon Wood, whose disappointing stay with the Angels came to an end when he was designated for assignment April 19, has signed on with Pittsburgh and gotten plenty of looks so far. He started the first game at third base and the next three at shortstop. The Pirates already have a long-term solution at third in Pedro Alvarez, so Wood has no hope of regular at-bats there, but he could certainly bump Ronny Cedeno at shortstop if he shows even a fraction of the power he did in the minors. He has renewed sleeper appeal, even if just in NL-only leagues. Maicer Izturis returned from a hamstring injury Saturday after missing about a week, but he got the start at third base, not shortstop. He was out of the lineup Sunday, so he's looking like he'll be just a part-time player with Erick Aybar back getting regular at-bats. Clint Barmes, who had been out all year with a broken left hand, returned to the lineup Friday, sending hot-hitting Angel Sanchez to the bench. Barmes isn't the best replacement for Fantasy purposes. He struggled his last two years in Colorado, and if you can't hit there, you can't hit anywhere. Robert Andino has replaced another glove-first shortstop, Cesar Izturis, which probably doesn't matter to anyone outside of Baltimore. Neither figures to start once J.J. Hardy returns from a strained oblique.
Must-Start Options: Hanley Ramirez, Troy Tulowitzki, Jose Reyes, Jimmy Rollins, Starlin Castro
Heating up
Stephen Drew: .327
(16 for 49), 2 HRs, .981 OPS in 13 games
Yuniesky Betancourt: .359 (14 for 39), 1 HR, 3 2Bs in 10 games
Jimmy Rollins: .370 (10 for 27), 1 HR, 1 SB, .987 OPS in seven games
Cooling off
Hanley Ramirez:
.152 (7 for 46), two extra-base hits, 2 SBs in 13 games
Miguel Tejada: .154 (6 for 39), no extra-base hits in 12 games
Troy Tulowitzki: .185 (5 for 27), two extra-base hits, 1 SB in seven
games
Worth a second look
Miguel Tejada
(38 percent started): Tejada isn't the greatest Fantasy sleeper
given his slow start and declining skills, but he's still enough of a
contact hitter at this stage of career to take advantage of favorable
matchups. He has some this week with four games against the Nationals
and Mets and three games against left-handers, against whom he posted an
.836 OPS last year. If you're desperate at shortstop, now wouldn't be
the worst time to give him a look.
Cliff Pennington (14 percent): Pennington doesn't have a ton
of upside, but as he showed last year, when he gets hot, he can make an
impact in Fantasy. He was miserable to begin the season, batting .195 (8
for 41) over his first 15 games, so this recent upswing could be the
beginning of a course correction. With good matchups against Jeanmar Gomez, Sean O'Sullivan, Luke Hochevar and Jeff Francis, he
has some sleeper appeal this week.
Approach with caution
Asdrubal Cabrera
(81 percent started): Cabrera has come back down to earth after
his hot start, batting .222 (12 for 54) over his last 13 games. He isn't
stealing bases, and he's unlikely to have a second power surge with
pitchers like Trevor Cahill, Brett Anderson, Dan Haren and Jered Weaver on the schedule. Don't be afraid to look into other
options in mixed leagues.
Yuniesky Betancourt
(10 percent): Betancourt might seem like a sneaky waiver claim
given his recent hitting streak, but the pitchers the Brewers face this
week -- Jair Jurrjens, Tommy Hanson, Tim Hudson, Brandon Beachy, Jaime Garcia, Kyle Lohse and Kyle McClellan --
are likely to slow him down. His poor plate discipline gives him little
to fall back on if he's not hitting for average or power, so you can
leave him for NL-only leagues.
Injury concerns
None.
Outfield
Just when Matt Joyce began to heat up, the Rays did their best to make sure he wouldn't become a viable Fantasy option, keeping him out of the lineup three times during a four-game stretch. He's apparently still a platoon player, sitting for second baseman Sean Rodriguez (who bumps Ben Zobrist to right field) against lefties, which more or less ruins his mixed-league appeal. Same goes for Seth Smith, who appeared to have the starting right field job locked up in Colorado before sitting for Ryan Spilborghs in four of the last five games against lefties. At least Michael Saunders, who isn't far removed from top-prospect stats, appears to have reclaimed the starting center field job from Ryan Langerhans in Seattle. Unfortunately, he has yet to hit a lick in the majors, making him useless in mixed leagues as well.
Must-Start Options: Carlos Gonzalez, Carl Crawford, Ryan Braun, Matt Holliday, Shin-Soo Choo, Andrew McCutchen, Shane Victorino, Jayson Werth, Jason Heyward, Justin Upton, Andre Ethier, Nelson Cruz, Matt Kemp, Ichiro Suzuki, Carlos Quentin, Lance Berkman, Alex Gordon, Drew Stubbs
Heating up
Andre Ethier: .400
(40 for 100), 3 HRs, 1.059 OPS during 26-game hit streak
Lance Berkman: .475 (29 for 61), 8 HRs, 1.497 OPS in 16 games
Ryan Braun: .420 (21 for 50), 6 HRs, 14 RBI, 2 SBs, 1.324 OPS in 12
games
Jose Bautista: .455 (15 for
33), 6 HRs, 2 SBs, 1.822 OPS, 16 BBs, 4 Ks in 11 games
Grady Sizemore: .378 (17 for 45), 4 HRs, 8 2Bs in 11 games
Jason Heyward: .400 (14 for 35), 3 HRs, 1.162 OPS during eight-game
hit streak
Ichiro Suzuki: .457 (16
for 35), 4 SBs, 0 Ks in eight games
Juan Rivera: .455 (10 for 22), 2 HRs, 1.328 OPS in six games
Alfonso Soriano: .417 (5 or 12), 4 HRs, 1.417 SLG in three games
Cooling off
Vernon Wells: .174
(19 for 109), five extra-base hits, .463 OPS in 26 games
Carl Crawford: .155 (15 for 97), 1 HR, 4 SBs, .431 OPS in 24 games
Alex Rios: .081 (3 for 37), 1 HR, 1 SB, .329 OPS in 11 games
Jose Tabata: .111 (4 for 36), one extra-base hit, 1 SB in 11 games
Jonny Gomes: .118 (4 for 34), one extra-base hit, 3 SBs, 5 BBs, 14 Ks
in 11 games
Carlos Lee: .100 (4 for
40), 1 HR, 1 SB, .388 OPS in 10 games
Carlos Gonzalez: .100 (3 for 30), .310 OPS in nine games
Nick Swisher: .138 (4 for 29), 1 HR, 9 Ks in eight games
Sam Fuld: .043 (1 for 23), .301 OPS in six games
Worth a second look
Jason Bay (66
percent started): Bay has shown pretty good pop since returning from
a rib cage injury April 21, hitting a homer and two doubles in his first
three games. He did slow down a little over the weekend, but considering
the Mets were facing the Phillies, you can cut him some slack. The guy
has been a 30-homer man and must-start Fantasy option for most of his
career, so if he's showing signs of returning to that form, you have to
get him active.
Brennan Boesch (60
percent): Boesch's performance certainly isn't in question. He's
batting .366 (15 for 41) over his last 11 games. He could go back to
sitting against lefties once DH Victor Martinez
(groin) returns from the DL, but the Tigers face five righties this
week. And they're not exactly aces in Bartolo Colon,
Freddy Garcia, A.J. Burnett, Kyle Drabek and Jesse Litsch.
Chris Coghlan (49
percent): Coghlan left Wednesday's game with a sore shoulder, but
that's more the residual effect of a spring injury than a brand new one.
He'll play through it, and if his recent power surge (three homers in
seven games) is a sign of things to come, he's worth starting even in
mixed leagues. You have to like him facing the Nationals three times as
part of a six-game week.
Cody Ross (7
percent): Ross seems to have the right-field job secured, starting
nine straight games there since returning from a strained calf.
Mixed-league owners probably aren't ready to take a leap of faith on
him, but deeper-league owners should take note he has a career .936 OPS
against lefties. The Giants are facing three lefties this week, and
their first four games are against the Nationals and Mets pitching
staffs.
Approach with caution
Nick Swisher
(73 percent started): Prior to last season, Swisher was the king
of streakiness, putting up a .600 OPS one month and a 1.000 OPS the
next, so his current numbers shouldn't come as too much of a surprise.
He'll still be a pretty productive outfielder when all is said and done,
but his one home run over the weekend isn't justification enough to
activate him.
Carlos Lee (69
percent): Hard to fathom why Lee's starting percentage is still so
high. He's hitting under .200 coming off a season when he was nothing
short of a Fantasy bust. He also could miss a couple games to start the
week after taking a knee in the gut Sunday. You could still own him
based on his track record, but you wouldn't want to start him until he
gets on a hot streak.
Juan Pierre (56
percent): Not only is Pierre hitting poorly, but he's running poorly
as well, getting caught stealing more times (seven) than he has
succeeded (five). For someone whose entire Fantasy worth is dependent on
stolen bases, that's not a good sign. Until the 33-year-old gets his
legs back under him (assuming that happens), he's a player to avoid
outside of Rotisserie leagues.
Denard Span
(56 percent): Span is off to a good start, but given his lack of
power, he's not the kind of player who can score tons of points in a
short period of time. His productivity comes through the accumulation of
stats, so the Twins' five-game week will hurt him more than most of
their players. And with those killer pitching matchups, chances are he
won't hit so well anyway.
Alex Rios (51
percent): Rios is far from a lost cause in Fantasy, but when you
look at his splits over the last few seasons, you can't feel
particularly optimistic about his immediate future. He had a .684 OPS in
the second half last year, a .623 OPS in the second half in 2009, and a
.737 OPS in the first half in 2008. He's a one-half type of player, and
it's pretty clear which type of half he's having so far. He's not beyond
sitting in mixed leagues.
Injury concerns
Jose Bautista
left Sunday's with neck tightness, but considering he drew a walk just
before the Blue Jays pulled him, the injury doesn't sound all that
serious. He'll have an off day to rest the injury Monday, so chances are
he won't even miss a game. Unless something changes in the next 24
hours, you should keep the Fantasy stud active ... Jose Tabata, who has recently struggled at the plate, is also
dealing with a hamstring injury. He isn't expected to miss much time,
but he was out of the lineup Sunday. He's still plenty intriguing for
Fantasy purposes, but his recent slump is probably reason enough not to
give him the benefit of the doubt ... Logan Morrison, who hasn't been out of a hard cast even a week,
thinks he'll be able to return from his Lisfranc sprain in the latter
half of Fantasy Week 5 (May 2-8), though he won't have a clear timetable
until he takes batting practice. Even in the most optimistic of
scenarios, he'd play only half a week, so in standard leagues, you
wouldn't want to take a chance on him ... Rajai Davis, who had been out since early April with an ankle injury,
returned over the weekend. He's not so productive in Fantasy that you
have to get him active right away, but if you need steals, you could
justify it. Corey Patterson hasn't
gotten to play much since Davis' return, so you should avoid him outside
of deeper AL-only leagues ... The Twins finally had to put Delmon Young (rib) on the DL when he couldn't get loose before
Wednesday's game. Considering he had already missed five games before
then, he won't have to miss the full 15 days. Rene Tosoni, who had been putting up nice numbers in the minors, has
been getting some starts in his absence, but he doesn't have enough
upside for mixed-league use.
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Team | 5/2 | 5/3 | 5/4 | 5/5 | 5/6 | 5/7 | 5/8 |
Athletics | TEX | CLE | CLE | CLE | @KC | @KC | @KC |
vs. Holland | vs. Carmona | vs. Tomlin | vs. Gomez | vs. O'Sullivan | vs. Hochevar | vs. Francis | |
Even if Tomlin and Carmona keep it going, they're the toughest competition the Athletics face all week. | |||||||
Tigers | NYY | NYY | NYY | NYY | @TOR | @TOR | @TOR |
vs. Colon | vs. Sabathia | vs. Garcia | vs. Burnett | vs. Drabek | vs. Litsch | vs. Reyes | |
This ranking hinges on expected regression for Colon and Garcia. Easy matchups other than Sabathia. | |||||||
Giants | @WAS | @NYM | @NYM | @NYM | COL | COL | COL |
vs. Gorzelanny | vs. Dickey | vs. Capuano | vs. Pelfrey | vs. Jimenez | vs. Rogers | vs. De La Rosa | |
Pitcher's park to begin week, but Giants are used to that. Only Jimenez should get the better of them. | |||||||
Orioles | @CHW | @KC | @KC | @KC | TB | TB | TB |
vs. Buehrle | vs. Francis | vs. Davies | vs. Chen | vs. Price | vs. Shields | vs. Davis | |
Royals rotation looking like cakewalk again. Should be enough hits early to make up for Rays series. | |||||||
Marlins | @STL | @STL | @STL | @STL | WAS | WAS | WAS |
vs. Lohse | vs. McClellan | vs. Carpenter | vs. Westbrook | vs. Zimmermann | vs. Gorzelanny | vs. Hernandez | |
Matchups get tougher here, but enough soft spots in Nats series for Florida to make most of a seven-game week. |
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Team | 5/2 | 5/3 | 5/4 | 5/5 | 5/6 | 5/7 | 5/8 |
Twins | -- | @CHW | @CHW | -- | @BOS | @BOS | @BOS |
-- | vs. Jackson | vs. Danks | -- | vs. Lackey | vs. Buchholz | vs. Lester | |
Five-game week is reason enough for this one to take the cake. Danks, Lackey and Lester only clinches it. | |||||||
Indians | -- | @OAK | @OAK | @OAK | @LAA | @LAA | @LAA |
-- | vs. Ross | vs. Cahill | vs. Anderson | vs. Chatwood | vs. Weaver | vs. Haren | |
Weaver, Haren, Cahill and Anderson might be the current leaders for AL Cy Young. Feel bad for the Indians. | |||||||
Mets | -- | SF | SF | SF | LAD | LAD | LAD |
-- | vs. Vogelsong | vs. Lincecum | vs. Sanchez | vs. Kuroda | vs. Garland | vs. Kershaw | |
About the last of the tough six-game weeks. Two legit aces and Sanchez, Kuroda, Garland haven't been bad. | |||||||
Braves | MIL | MIL | MIL | MIL | @PHI | @PHI | @PHI |
vs. Gallardo | vs. Estrada | vs. Greinke | vs. Marcum | vs. Halladay | vs. Lee | vs. Hamels | |
Seven-game week, but will have to scrape for hits in Phillies series. Brewers rotation is not so bad either. | |||||||
Brewers | @ATL | @ATL | @ATL | @ATL | @STL | @STL | @STL |
vs. Jurrjens | vs. Hanson | vs. Hudson | vs. Beachy | vs. Garcia | vs. Lohse | vs. McClellan | |
All seven pitchers, particularly Atlanta's four, are on a roll right now. Only good news is Brewers miss Carpenter. |
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