Colorado Rockies prospects: No. 10, Griffin Herring

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 17, 2025: Griffin Herring #35 of the New York Yankees pitches during a spring training minor league intrasquad scrimmage game at the Himes Complex on March 17, 2025 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

10. Griffin Herring (368 points, 19 ballots)

Herring was the headline prospect coming to the Rockies from the Yankees in exchange for Ryan McMahon near last year’s trade deadline. The 6’2”, 22-year-old lefty pitcher was the Yankees’ sixth-round pick in 2024 out of LSU as a draft-eligible sophomore. Herring signed for a $798k bonus that was over double the pick’s $340k slot value, more akin to a late third-round pick’s slot value. Herring was a key contributor as a freshman to the 2023 National Championship squad as an ace multi-inning reliever despite velocity topping out in the low 90s, then was even more impressive in that role as a sophomore (1.79 ERA, 1.03 WHIP, 12.0 K/9 rate, 2.3 BB/9 rate) in 50 1/3 innings (which was third on the team) across 21 games.

Mid-season 2025 Rank: 14

High Ballot: 6

Mode Ballot: 10

Future Value: 40+, back-end starter

Contract Status: 2025 Trade, New York Yankees, Rule 5 Eligible After 2027, three options remaining

MLB ETA: 2027

As a professional, the Yankees not only gave Herring the opportunity to start, they remade his delivery and his pitch mix — emphasizing the slider. The result was a breakout debut professional season. Herring made eight starts in Low-A to begin the year and was dominant, posting a miniscule 1.21 ERA with a 0.9 WHIP and 11.7 K/9 rate in 44 2/3 innings as a league average pitcher. A late-May promotion to High-A (where he was 1.2 years younger than league average) didn’t faze Herring much. He threw eight more strong starts with another 44 2/3 innings, a 2.22 ERA, 1.16 WHIP, 8.9 K/9 rate, and 4.0 BB/9 rate — though his 3.71 xFIP indicated some good fortune.

After the trade in late July, Herring made seven shorter starts for High-A Spokane as the Rockies no doubt metered his usage considering his lower innings total in 2023 and 2024. In 30 innings with Spokane, Herring allowed eleven earned runs (2.40 ERA) on 14 hits and 13 walks ( 0.90 WHIP) while striking out an impressive 47 hitters (14.1 K/9 rate). In fact, Herring struck out over a batter per inning in every single start with Spokane, going a max of 84 pitches and five innings in those outings, and was named the August Pitcher of the Month in the Northwest League.

Across the full 2025 season, Herring threw 119 1/3 innings across two levels and three teams with a 1.89 ERA, 1.00 WHIP, 11.2 K/9 rate, and 3.7 BB/9 rate while allowing only a .530 OPS. That’s 149 strikeouts against 49 walks and 70 hits. Impressively, the lefty was even stingier when batters had the platoon advantage (.485 OPS for righties, .639 OPS for lefties), though Herring cut down the mightiest hitters in the league regardless of handedness.

Here’s some video of Herring in High-A in a mid June start:

Additionally, here’s an interview with Herring from August where he describes his adjustment to a new team and a new coast.

Keith Law of the Athletic recently ranked Herring 10th in the system:

Herring struck out 31.4 percent of batters he faced last year, the seventh-best strikeout rate among all qualifying starters in the minors. He sits 90-92 from a very high slot that gives him a ton of deception, working with a short slider that generates a ton of whiffs and an average changeup. He’s almost certainly a reliever between the slot and the below-average fastball, but could get there quickly and be valuable in any kind of once-through-the-order role. I wish he’d been traded to the Reds; I’m worried in Denver, he’ll get smoked.

Baseball America ranked Herring 12th in the system last month:

Herring has been developed as a starter, which might seem strange for a player with a fastball that averaged a tick under 90 mph in 2025, but his nearly seven feet of extension and slight pause in his delivery create an impressive angle of attack, plenty of deception and a whippy finish. He has found the most success so far with a mid-80s slider that generates plenty of whiffs within the strike zone. … If Herring wants to remain a starter, he’ll need to add more zip to his fastball, perhaps by packing on some muscle over the offseason. His profile and wipeout slider could fit better in a bullpen.

Shaun Kernahan of Three Quarter Slot wrote up Herring earlier this month:

Herring operates with a deceptive, athletic delivery from the extreme third-base side of the rubber, using extension, timing disruption, and angle to make a below-average fastball play above its raw velocity. The heater lacks pure velo, but the ride/run shape allows it to miss bats at the top of the zone when located, even if it can flatten out and get exposed when it leaks arm-side or into the middle. Your look showed a mechanical operation with a slow windup and quick finish, hiding the ball well but occasionally losing consistency through release, which ties directly to the fastball’s volatility. A modest velocity bump would materially change the profile, especially given how well the rest of the arsenal fits a starter look.

The slider is the clear carrying pitch, working in the mid-80s with tight gyro action and strong spin, consistently landing glove-side and missing bats against both lefties and righties. The changeup is better than most give credit for, showing real vertical separation and late tumble when executed, particularly effective against right-handed hitters. Strike throwing is generally solid, though command can waver within outings, leading to stretches where hitters are off balance followed by lapses where he misses his spots. His background as a high-leverage reliever at LSU shows up in the competitiveness and ability to execute secondary pitches, but the long-term path hinges on fastball improvement. If the heater takes even a small step forward, there’s a workable starter track; if not, the slider/changeup combination still fits an innings-eating role or leverage usage where the deception and bat-miss traits can play up.

MLB Pipeline is high on Herring, ranking him 9th in the system as a 45 FV player with a 60 grade on the slider:

Herring’s best pitch is a sweeping mid-80s slider with horizontal and vertical action that confounds both lefties and righties. He can’t overpower hitters with his fastball, which operates in the low 90s and tops out at 94 with some armside run, and he’ll need to find more velocity or life against better competition. He threw only 11 changeups at LSU but emphasized the pitch more during three Cape Cod League starts last summer, showing some decent if firm mid-80s cambios with depth.

Herring has a long arm action and a less-than-smooth delivery, though it throws batters’ timing off and didn’t stop him from pounding the strike zone as a sophomore. To succeed as a pro starter, he’ll need to add more strength to his 6-foot-2 frame and improve his fastball and changeup. If he can’t, he still could become a high-leverage reliever thanks to his slider and mound presence.

Eric Longenhagen at FanGraphs ranks Herring 20th in the system as a 40 FV pitcher with a 55 future grade on the slider and command:

The Yankees made several changes to Herring after drafting him (more sliders, better extension, higher arm slot) and the result looks like a stable backend starter despite 30-grade fastball velocity.

Herring spent two years as LSU’s most consistent long reliever (working as many as five innings) and was a draft-eligible sophomore in 2024. The Yankees made multiple changes to his delivery and pitch usage, which helped him dominate Low-A and earn a promotion after just eight starts. He had a 1.71 ERA combined at both levels at the time of the trade, though his K% dipped quite a bit after he was moved up to Hudson Valley. Herring’s fastball only averages about 90 mph, but lives off deception and riding life. Since turning pro, his arm slot has been raised, but Herring’s stride down the mound has gotten bigger and longer, and his extension was just shy of seven feet at the time of the trade. His loose, whippy arm action prevents hitters from seeing the baseball until release, and despite lacking anything close to average big league fastball velocity, Herring’s heater has generated above-average miss and chase so far this year.

With the Yankees, Herring also emphasized use of his slider, which has become his most-deployed pitch. It ranged from 80-85 mph in his final outing prior to the deal, and has tight late movement but lacks huge depth. It’s playing like an above-average pitch in pro ball. Herring didn’t really have a changeup in college, but he’s added one as a pro and is throwing it about 14% of the time. His feel for it isn’t bad considering he’s just begun using it, but it often cuts on him or finishes too high. A smooth on-mound operator, Herring looks the part of a starter even though he isn’t especially physical because of his mechanical grace. It’s impressive that he’s maintained his excellent college strike-throwing even though his delivery has been changed, and he projects as a high-floored backend starter.

Herring joins fellow PuRPs Carson Palmquist (No. 19) and Sean Sullivan as left-handed Rockies pitching prospects who use deception and extension to make mediocre fastball velocity play up. Herring hasn’t yet proved his effectiveness against upper-minors hitting like the other two pitchers have, but he is my favorite of the group given his weapon of a slider and is a 40+ FV player for me, ranking tenth on my list. I expect Herring to start in Double-A this season, with a big league debut possible later in the year if he’s successful and healthy.


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Nationals Cade Cavalli Is Working On A New Pitch That Could Change The Game For Him

Cade Cavalli made his long-awaited return to the big league mound in August 2025, and in his 48.2 innings pitched, he flashed brilliance, posting a 95th percentile chase rate, 95th percentile barrel rate, and 93rd percentile groundball rate. Outside of a disastrous outing against the Yankees in August, where he allowed 7 earned runs over 2 1/3 innings, Cavalli was extremely productive in his starts, giving up more than 3 runs just once.

One of the few areas in which Cavalli struggled in his return to action in 2025 was against right-handed hitters, who had his number with a .381 opponents batting average and .990 opponents OPS, much worse in comparison to his .221 opponents batting average and .651 opponents OPS against lefties. He bumped up his curveball and sinker usage and bumped down his fastball and changeup usage against righties, but it wasn’t enough to keep them from hitting at a high clip against them.

The good news is that, entering the 2026 campaign, it appears Cavalli is working on a new pitch that will give him an edge against righties. According to Mark Zuckerman of Nats Journal, Cavalli has spent the offseason working on a sweeper for his arsenal, a pitch similar to a slider, but less sharp and with more verticality. If he can get a feel for it and incorporate the pitch into his pitch arsenal, he may finally have the answer he’s been looking for to getting right-handed hitters out consistently.

The sweeper has been around for many years, with Corey Kluber throwing a version of the pitch in the 2010s, but it gained popularity within the last few years, surging in usage in 2022 and 2023. Today, it’s a weapon in the arsenal of some of the best pitchers in the league, with Garrett Crochet and Paul Skenes ranking near the top in run value with the pitch.

The slider is the more traditional pitch that pitchers use to get same-side hitters out, so why a sweeper for Cavalli? My theory is that a sweeper will tunnel better than a slider with Cavalli’s curveball, his most used pitch against righties at 33%. Pairing a sweeper with his curveball will not only give hitters another pitch to worry about, but it also prevents them from being able to sit on Cavalli’s curveball in any given count.

Pitchers tinker with new pitches all the time, and while they don’t always stick due to lack of feel or command, Cavalli being able to keep the sweeper in his arsenal would be massive in his development as a frontline starter for the Nats. With improved success against righties, as well as more and more experience against big league lineups, I believe Cavalli has what it takes to not only potentially start on Opening Day for the club in 2026, but in years beyond.

Mets 2026 Season Preview: Christian Arroyo is another short-term shortstop stop gap

Mar 9, 2024; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Milwaukee Brewers second baseman Christian Arroyo (25) flips the ball against the Seattle Mariners in the second inning at American Family Fields of Phoenix. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

In our collective, continued existence as residents of Panic City, the fear surrounding Francisco Lindor’s surgically repaired left hand is lingering on the edges of our minds. Yesterday, we looked at Jackson Cluff as a potential short-term replacement for Lindor if the timing of his recovery is slower than expected. Today, we do the same with Christian Arroyo. 

While on the surface Arroyo and Cluff look similar, their circumstances are quite different. Arroyo, entering his age 31 season, is out of minor league options and so can’t be moved up and down from Triple-A Syracuse without clearing waivers, whereas Cluff has yet to make his big league debut yet and can make that trek as often as the Mets like. While Cluff was a sixth round draft pick out of college, Arroyo went in the first round out of high school and was once heralded as one of the best prospects in baseball. 

It is likely due to that prospect background that Arroyo is still sticking around, 13 years after being drafted by the Giants with the 25th overall pick. Prospects of that caliber usually have natural talent for days and the thought is that they are more likely to ‘figure it out’ late than someone with a lesser skillset. 

But time is running out for Arroyo to do just that. In 295 MLB games, he’s hit just .252/.299/.394 with 24 home runs. His last big league at-bat came in 2023 with the Red Sox; in subsequent full minor league seasons with the Brewers and Phillies, he never once got called up. 

On the plus side, he’s defensively versatile, having played all four infield positions as well as right field. He also had a nice offensive season in Triple-A Lehigh Valley last season, but a BABIP of .375 might have somewhat inflated that number. 

This signing has almost no downside for the Mets. Arroyo is cheap, he’ll get some spring reps, and if Lindor’s recovery time is brief and healthy, he’ll either wind up in Syracuse or out of the organization. If, for some reason, he unlocks something after a baker’s dozen years in pro baseball, fantastic. But even if he doesn’t, this is the type of move that teams can and should make all the time.  

Elephant Rumblings: Prospects and Non-Roster Hopefuls Take Center Stage

Happy Friday everybody!

Spring Training is truly underway. Next week will be the first full week of practice leading up to the first preseason games a week from today. 

In the early days of camp, teams often limit their starters to a few innings every other day to avoid injury or burnout before the 162-game marathon begins.  Fans heading to the first few games at Hohokam expecting to see Nick Kurtz, Brent Rooker and Jacob Wilson may instead find a lineup featuring Michael Stefanic, Cade Marlowe and other non-roster players.

Yet, that is the magic of spring training and a great way for a player to make a strong first impression on his new team’s coaching staff. Every spring training game features multiple lineup changes halfway through the game, ensuring everyone from starters to top minor-league prospects to lesser-known players has the opportunity to make an impact.

This spring, much of the spotlight will be on the A’s stellar young offensive core, along with three of the organization’s top prospects: shortstop Leo De Vries and left-handed starting pitchers Gage Jump and Jamie Arnold.

All three are among the 31 non-roster invitees in camp this year. They will have the chance to show why the A’s think so highly of them. Additionally, these next few weeks serve as a showcase for the likes of Stefanic and other non-roster players to vie for organizational roster spots, most likely with the A’s Triple-A affiliate Las Vegas Aviators.

Last spring, Justin Sterner entered camp relatively unknown and earned a spot in the Opening Day bullpen after tossing 12 scoreless innings. With the A’s bullpen one of the weakest and most in-flux aspects of the team, there is an opportunity for a non-roster reliever to follow in Sterner’s footsteps. Veteran Nick Anderson is in camp after struggling last season with the Colorado Rockies, while GustavoRodriguez recorded a 2.27 ERA last year with the Aviators.

What are you looking forward to as spring training ramps up? Which players will be the surprises and disappointments of A’s camp?

A’s Coverage

MLB News and Interest

Best of X:

What do you think of this? What kind of content should the A’s put out to engage fans?

AJ Causey’s stuff looks nasty, and it wouldn’t be surprising to see him coming out of the bullpen for the A’s this season.

A’s players happy to be back together at spring training.

MLB Considering Partnering With Prediction Platforms

Major League Baseball is considering becoming the second major American professional team sports league to partner with prediction platforms.

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said on Thursday that the league is mulling teaming up with increasingly popular platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket.

Key Takeaways

  • The league did not say it was actively engaging in negotiations.

  • MLB is in the middle of an illegal sports betting investigation involving teammates and a three-time All-Star.

  • Partnership with prediction platforms could allow MLB to help with integrity monitoring.

ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported that MLB team owners were informed during their quarterly meetings that the league could ingratiate itself with the prediction industry.

Manfred conceded that he only learned about platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket a few months ago. The NHL is the only other American professional team sports league to have prediction partners, both of which are listed above. 

UFC also has a partnership deal with Polymarket.

“We thought it was important for the owners to be updated on why prediction markets are different than sports betting – why we might want to consider being in business with prediction markets in an effort to protect our integrity, to get the kind of protections we need,” Manfred said. “The regulatory framework, very different. Obviously, state by state on the sports betting side, federal on the other.”

Protecting integrity

One of the primary concerns in the modern era of sports gambling and prediction market trading is the potential for illicit manipulation.

The MLB is currently experiencing that with an ongoing case involving Cleveland Guardians pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz, who were charged with manipulating their performances in games for the benefit of sports bettors. Clase specifically was accused of rigging pitches in 48 games, or roughly one-fourth of his appearances in a two-year span.

Despite that precedent, Manfred said that teaming up with prediction platforms would allow the league to be in greater control of threats of nefarious manipulation.

“There's obviously an opportunity to work with the markets themselves to get the kind of integrity protections you want,” he said.

In the interest of preserving integrity, Kalshi announced earlier this month a slew of overhauls designed to increase consumer protection. That included banning insider trading, hiring former Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, Brian Nelson, as an adviser on market integrity, and integrating responsible trading and iMarket integrity pages on its platform, among others.

What’s the big deal?

Prediction platforms offer similar services to sportsbooks, but their operational and regulatory frameworks are completely different.

Whereas legal sportsbook users compete against the house with pre-determined odds, prediction users buy and sell contracts related to various outcomes. Prices are dictated by real-time consumer demand, influenced by updates and current events.

State gaming regulators are in charge of monitoring sportsbooks. Prediction market apps operate under the watchful eye of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

A growing collection of state regulators have expressed a form of concern related to prediction markets being allowed to operate without their approval. In response, the platforms have claimed that their federal regulation supersedes state-level decisions.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here

MLB's ABS challenge system ushers in a new ballgame with 'robo umps'

SCOTTSDALE, AZ — Bring on the robots, tap your helmet if you disagree, and tell your analytic department it better preparing be for a whole new wave of research.

The automated ball/strike system is here for the first time in Major League Baseball, and general managers, managers and coaching staffs have already begun to strategize the best way to capitalize on a new way to challenge authority.

If the pitcher, catcher or batter disagrees with a ball or strike call, they have the right to challenge the umpire, with everyone in the stands able to see who was right with a graphic on full display on the scoreboard.

Teams get two challenges per nine innings, and as long as you’re proven correct, you can challenge as many times as you wish.

If you’re wrong twice, you’re out of challenges unless the game goes into extra innings.

The only players permitted to challenge are the pitcher, hitter and catcher and pitcher, and it must be issued within two seconds of the pitch being thrown, signaled by tapping your helmet.

An umpire looks on during an ABS challenge in spring training 2025.

If you blow through your challenges early, you won’t have the right to correct an errant call in the ninth inning. If the game goes into extra innings, each team will be provided one challenge in each extra inning.

So, the question for every manager now is who will be permitted to challenge, at what stage of the game, and under which circumstances.

“All I know is that we won’t let our pitchers challenge," Cincinnati Reds manager Terry Francona said. “They think everything is a strike."

Francona laughed, but it’s certainly a sentiment shared by several managers in interviews Thursday, with most saying they would leave that up to their catchers and hitters.

But, of course, not every hitter.

“We’re going to have a lot of conversations about that," Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “I do think there’s going to be a strategy that comes with it. What that looks like, I don’t think I know right now, but we’re going to encourage conversations as far as leverage, when you use it, when not to, who should, who shouldn’t.’’

So, who has been told they can’t use it?

“I don’t want to say because they’ve already been sensitive when I brought it up," Roberts said. “So, I’m not going to name-call right now. I’m not going to say any names but I don't think that there’s a self-evaluation on who knows the strike zone, who doesn’t, who gets emotional, and understanding everything.

“I’m in favor of it."

Says Francona: “We don’t have a strategy in place because we want to kind of see how it plays out. I’ve already talked to some of our player development people to ask them how they did it, and then we’ll formulate a strategy and try to do it better than other teams like everything else.

“But I think it’s going to be OK."

In research by MLB, there were four challenges per games at the Triple-A level last season with about a 50% success rate. The most challenges, 3.5%, were utilized in the ninth inning.

“You want to have one late in the game, just in case,” Arizona Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said. “The top of the first inning on a 0-0 fastball, I don’t want to challenge and lose. We’ll most likely rely on catchers first. Pitchers at times get a little emotional. Hitters can be that way sometimes, too. I think we’re going to rely on the catchers.

“But I want to have one in pocket, when I can, when it’s in a critical part of the game.”

It will be a strategy that will be implemented by teams in spring training, and tweaked throughout the year, with plans constantly being modified on when it should be best utilized.

“We’re going to do some experimentation over the course of the spring," said Los Angeles GM Perry Minasian. “We’ve had some staff members that have been more familiar with it than others in the minor leagues, so we’re just going to see how it evolves and how it goes.

“I’m sure every team has had conversations about it and undergone studies. We’re going to get as many different opinions and viewpoints as we can get get. We’ll go through all of the types of things through the course of spring training. I’m not one for a steadfast rule who can use it and who can’t, but I think there will be a certain component of earning the right to do it, who’s capable of doing it and who’s not.

“And I’m sure there will be adjustments made throughout the course of the year. What we may do in April may be different in May, different in June, different in July. It’s going to be one of the unique things about this season."

The ABS will add about one minute per game, according to MLB’s research, with each challenge averaging 13.8 seconds. The strike zone is also expected to slightly shrink, according to Joe Martinez, MLB’s vice president of on-field strategy. Each player will be measured by height this spring, with strike zones starting at 53.5% of a batter’s height at the top and 27% of a batter’s height for the bottom of the zone

There will be some glitches at times. There were 291 pitches that were untracked out of the 88,534 pitches last spring, according to MLB’s research. And if the computer system malfunctions, the umpires will again have the ultimate authority.

There will also be times when a team asks for instant replay on the field at the same time as a challenge. In that case, the umpires will determine the instant replay result before the challenge is assessed and be given discretion on plays that on the bases that could be impacted by challenges.

The challenge system will not be in effect when a position player is pitching in a game.

MLB also announced that the base coaches must remain in their coaching boxes until a pitch is delivered, hoping to eliminate sign stealing. It also tweaked its obstruction rule so that a runner who initiates contact with a fielder trying to draw an obstruction call will now be called out.

Play ball, and keep those computers churning.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB ABS system, 'robot umpires' and new rules are a whole new ballgame

Good Morning San Diego: Multiple players looking to pitch their way into bullpen role

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - SEPTEMBER 30: Adrian Morejon #50 of the San Diego Padres pitches during the sixth inning of game one of the National League Wild Card Series between the San Diego Padres and the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on September 30, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Most baseball analysts believe the San Diego Padres have the best bullpen in MLB. Even with losing All-Star closer Robert Suarez to free agency, the Padres continue to have arguably the best ‘pen in the game in large part due to Mason Miller stepping into the closer role. Adrian Morejon and Jeremiah Estrada are returning and Jason Adam is expected to recover from his ruptured quadriceps tendon in time to make an impact on the season. As Cheri Bell of Gaslamp Ball reported, the problem for San Diego might be too much bullpen depth. There are possibly six spots available but there are nearly three times as many players fighting for those spots.

Padres News:

  • We have seen possible Padres free agent targets such as Justin Verlander, Chris Bassitt and Mile Mikolas leave free agency to join their new teams but Lincoln Zdunich of Gaslamp Ball identifies possible free agent pitchers who are left to add at various price points.  
  • AJ Cassavell of Padres.com believes there are four players who are competing for the fifth spot in the rotation. He names JP Sears, Matt Waldon, Triston McKenzie and Marco Gonzales as pitchers competing for the final rotation spot.
  • One of the main topics of the offseason has been the potential for a contract extension for Padres president of baseball operation and general manager A.J. Preller. He met with the media Thursday and stated he believes a contract will get done and that he wants to remain in San Diego. Preller added “We’re either going to do it or not.”
  • Anthony Franco of MLB Trade Rumors compiled notes about the Padres that cover multiple topics including the rotation, Randy Vasquez and Luis Campusano.

Baseball News:

2026 Fantasy Baseball Shortstop Rankings: Bobby Witt Jr. leads star-studded position

Both the deepest and most star-studded position in fantasy baseball, shortstops are ready for another banner season.

Bobby Witt Jr. followed up his historically good 2024 season with a 2025 that didn't quite match the sky-high expectations. He still wound up as the top shortstop, but only by a thin margin over the recently-injured Francisco Lindor and Geraldo Perdomo. All eyes will be on Perdomo this year with doubts he can repeat a near-MVP campaign.

The rest of the group is strong with 11 shortstops currently being drafted in the top-100 picks according to the NFBC and 14 of them returned at least $10 in earned value last season according to the FanGraphs Player Rater.

A step forward is always in the offing for Elly De La Cruz. Gunnar Henderson is being drafted at a discount after a down year. Trea Turner looks elite once again. Zach Neto is a strong bet to put up his first 30-30 season. Trevor Story finally stayed healthy. Jeremy Peña just received MVP votes. Mookie Betts is an afterthought relative to how he’s been seen during his career. Bo Bichette is joining an incredible Mets lineup and will pick up third base eligibility. There are stars everywhere at this position.

Otherwise, Willy Adames, Xander Bogaerts, and Dansby Swanson offer quality floors. Corey Seager will mash (when he’s on the field). Jacob Wilson could lead the league in batting average. Xavier Edwards could lead the league in steals. Konnor Griffin might be one of the most valuable hitters in the league once he gets the call up to the Pirates. Colson Montgomery needs more attention for what he did last season, albeit with a flawed profile.

There is just so much talent here.

Below you’ll find what the Rotoworld staff forecasts for shortstop heading into spring drafts, along with profiles and projections for all the top options. More fantasy baseball draft prep content is on the way in the coming weeks, so stay tuned!

Other position previews:

⚾️ Coming soon: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

⚾ 2026 Fantasy Baseball Shortstop Rankings

** Rotoworld staff consensus rankings **

RankPlayerPouliotSamulskiSchianoShortMontanezBissellShoveinCrawfordConsensus Avg
1Bobby Witt Jr.111111111
2Elly De La Cruz323222222.25
3Gunnar Henderson232333432.875
4Trea Turner544445544.375
5Francisco Lindor655654354.875
6Zach Neto467566665.75
7Mookie Betts1176877777.5
8CJ Abrams7897988128.5
9Bo Bichette109810131111810
10Geraldo Perdomo91013981091310.125
11Jeremy Pena8111212109101410.75
12Corey Seager12131113111214911.875
13Trevor Story151214111214121012.5
14Willy Adames171410141415131514
15Jacob Wilson131516161618161115.125
16Dansby Swanson191615151516151816.125
17Ezequiel Tovar161818171725191618.25
18Xavier Edwards141725182019171718.375
19Xander Bogaerts181917201825182019.375
20Konnor Griffin252520192513251921.375

Editor’s Note: Projections and dollar values courtesy of Matthew Pouliotplayer rankings are based on consensus.

⚾ 2026 Shortstop Projections and Previews

1) Bobby Witt Jr. - Kansas City Royals

2026 Outlook: The best player in baseball that we don’t talk about enough, Witt would be a hands down, consensus number one overall pick in a parallel universe where Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani didn’t exist. Alas, there are still few other players that can push for 30 homers, 40 stolen bases, and a .300 batting average like Witt can. That being said, a season like his last is also well within the range of outcomes. It was a great year by regular standards, but caused him to fall outside the top-five overall players in earned value by season’s end and the margins are that slim when picking at the top of a draft. Based on his raw power, Witt should be flirting with 40 homers. Perhaps the fences moving in at Kauffman Stadium could help nudge him there. There would also probably need to be a slight tweak to his approach to coax more power production. Witt lets the ball travel a bit deeper than others and uses all the fields well. In turn, he pulls his fly balls at a below league average rate and only had three opposite field homers last season. Of course, we should never fix what isn’t broken. That’s just the last piece that could get Witt in range of Judge and Ohtani.

2026 projection: (Mixed $47) 616 AB, 106 R, 29 HR, 95 RBI, 33 SB, 37 2B, 6 3B, .294/.357/.515

2) Elly De La Cruz - Cincinnati Reds

2026 Outlook: There was some disappointment surrounding De La Cruz last season mostly because his stolen base total fell from a league-leading 67 in 2024 down to 37. Despite that, he was the 15th overall hitter in earned value. The stakes were simply higher after he became a consensus top-five pick in drafts last winter and funny enough, he made some improvements under the hood that could be missed given the discourse that surrounds him. The main gripe with De La Cruz was always that his high strikeout rate was untenable for what some considered an elite player. Well, he finally got that in check and whiffed at far fewer breaking balls in the process. He also did far less damage and it’s fair to wonder if he can ever marry his outrageous power with an acceptable contact rate or if he’ll be spending the next few years on this same seesaw. There’s also a growing trend that he’s a much, much better hitter from the left side compared to the right. Still, the floor here is probably higher than some realize and the ceiling could be the number one overall player.

2026 projection: (Mixed $37) 589 AB, 91 R, 25 HR, 86 RBI, 40 SB, 31 2B, 6 3B, .265/.340/.465

3) Gunnar Henderson - Baltimore Orioles

2026 Outlook: In retrospect, it seems clear that an oblique injury last spring set Henderson off-kilter. His average bat speed fell by a full mile per hour compared to the previous season and his power output dramatically lagged because of it. Also, he uncharacteristically chased more pitches out of the strike zone than he did the year before. In the past, some star players have talked about further expanding the zone in an attempt to do more damage and ‘save’ their teams. Anecdotally, this makes sense for Henderson after his Orioles were in the hole early last season with an abysmal April and May. There’s no proof, but it was strange to see a skill of his that seemed so secure fall off that drastically. Nevertheless, he appears to be a value in drafts right now going after the first 15 picks.

2026 projection: (Mixed $38) 576 AB, 96 R, 30 HR, 92 RBI, 25 SB, 31 2B, 5 3B, .276/.360/.503

4) Trea Turner - Philadelphia Phillies

2026 Outlook: Turner turned in his best overall season as a Phillie that likely would’ve seen him in the top-three among all shortstops if not for a hamstring injury that knocked him out for September. Still, he hit .300 for the first time since 2021 and stole 30 bases for the second time since then. His home run power appears to be gone though, a trend that has held up for a few years now and is matched by fading underlying power metrics. There remains an avenue for him to stay near-elite through his 30s with a speed and contact-based profile, just without the gaudy ceiling that pushed him to the front half of the first round for many of the last five years.

2026 projection: (Mixed $25) 596 AB, 96 R, 20 HR, 71 RBI, 28 SB, 30 2B, 3 3B, .285/.338/.446

5) Francisco Lindor - New York Mets

2026 Outlook: Even in his age-31 season Lindor did not miss a beat. He hit 30 homers for the third straight year and was one of seven players to go 30-30. In fact, he’s a short-term back injury in 2024 and one stolen base away from joining Barry Bonds as the only players ever to have three straight 30-30 seasons. His power and rate stats lagged a bit compared to last year due to an early summer toe injury and prolonged slump that followed, but all of his numbers wound up exactly where we’d expected them to by season’s end. Now, his status for Opening Day is in jeopardy after breaking the hamate bone in his left hand. His power is likely to lag for the first month or so after returning, which knocks him down a bit in these rankings. Hitting ahead of Juan Soto – and probably Bo Bichette – after he returns will likely help him get his counting stats back where they’re used to being by season’s end.

2026 projection: (Mixed $33) 626 AB, 104 R, 29 HR, 81 RBI, 26 SB, 31 2B, 2 3B, .256/.331/.450

New York Mets v. Philadelphia Phillies
Corbin Carroll, Francisco Lindor, Spencer Schwellenbach, and Jackson Holliday are among the injuries to watch in our latest update.

6) Zach Neto - Los Angeles Angels

2026 Outlook: Neto’s breakout last season was somewhat hidden in plain sight mostly due to only playing in 128 games due to an early shoulder injury and late hand injury. Nevertheless, he played at better than a 30-30 pace and made massive improvements with his swing decisions to the point where that facet of his game should be considered elite. He also figured out how to go out and get the baseball, making contact further out in front of the plate compared to 2024. That’s how he gets to so much power without top-end bat speed. With 30 homers and 30 stolen bases as something like the 50th percentile outcome, there are plenty of ways for Neto to justify his ADP approaching the top-30.

2026 projection: (Mixed $34) 593 AB, 94 R, 32 HR, 84 RBI, 26 SB, 33 2B, 2 3B, .261/.327/.486

7) Mookie Betts - Los Angeles Dodgers

2026 Outlook: It’s unlikely Betts’ poor 2025 has signaled the end of his prime, right? I mean, he had a 154 wRC+ collectively through the two seasons prior to this most recent one (after he’d already turned 30) and felt age-less. Yet, Betts’ meaningful power metrics all took a big step down two years ago which could have foreshadowed this downturn. His average bat speed fell below 70 mph which was near the bottom of the league and in turn, he didn’t hit the ball as hard. Betts’ batted ball quality was even worse last year, but a lot of those woes could be written off to a March virus he caught in Japan that reportedly caused him to lose 20 pounds and a toe injury he played through for most of the first half. Through it all, his swing decisions remained excellent and his contact rate elite. He’s likely not as bad as he was last season. It would also be a surprise for him to return to the level he showed in 2023 or 2024. Also, it’s rare for 33-year-olds like Betts to play every day at shortstop. The Dodgers don’t have any meaningful alternatives at the position though.

2026 projection: (Mixed $10) 548 AB, 89 R, 21 HR, 80 RBI, 11 SB, 27 2B, 2 3B, .265/.349/.436

8) CJ Abrams - Washington Nationals

2026 Outlook: Still only 25 years old, Abrams has all the tools to be one of the league’s most dynamic players. He just lacks the consistency required to make the leap. Impatience from fantasy managers is fair at this point. Abrams has learned to be a bit more selective compared to the free-swinger he came in the league as and can do more damage now than ever before. Maybe his on-base percentage or defensive ability rise enough to be considered a star in real life, but more slight incremental improvements to his swing decisions can fairly easily push him to a 30-30 season with a high batting average. New coaches and a new philosophy in Washington could help him move in the right direction this coming season. Or, frustration continues to mount and he becomes some other organization’s dilemma.

2026 projection: (Mixed $19) 601 AB, 87 R, 23 HR, 77 RBI, 30 SB, 31 2B, 4 3B, .260/.320/.439

9) Geraldo Perdomo - Arizona Diamondbacks

2026 Outlook: Respectfully, where on earth did Perdomo’s 2025 season come from? He’d spent the first few years of his career as a contact-oriented, slap-hitting shortstop who was best known for his silky smooth defense. Before this breakout campaign, his career-highs were six home runs, 47 RBI, 16 stolen bases, 30 extra-base hits, and a .718 OPS. He didn’t just improve on each, but blew them so far out of the water they seem comical looking back. If you played in a points-based league, Perdomo was more than likely the top shortstop and one of the five or so highest scoring players overall last year. It was nothing short of a legendary breakout which has pushed his draft cost well inside the top-100 picks. There’s ample reason for caution that he can repeat that same level of production though given lackluster power metrics and an ultra-passive approach at the plate. He’ll be one of the more interesting players to track this coming season.

2026 projection: (Mixed $13) 588 AB, 96 R, 14 HR, 71 RBI, 21 SB, 31 2B, 4 3B, .274/.364/.412

10) Jeremy Peña - Houston Astros

2026 Outlook: If not for two trips to the injured list resulting in nearly 40 missed games, Peña could have flirted with a seven-WAR season and received even more than the handful of down-ballot MVP votes he wound up with. That being said, it’s difficult to see how he repeats anything near last year’s production at the plate. Being more selective helped him bump up his walk rate and find better pitches to hit. In doing so, it seems like he was more prepared to hunt fastballs as he went from a .284 batting average and .397 slugging percentage against them in 2024 to an eye-popping .370 BA and .704 SLG last season. He did manage to hit the ball harder overall, so the jump isn’t completely out of left field, just so statistically stark that it’s worth calling into question. There’s reason to believe he’ll be around 20 home runs, 20 stolen bases, and a .280 average again though, which would justify his draft cost around pick 100 as the 10th shortstop off the board.

2026 projection: (Mixed $13) 580 AB, 84 R, 20 HR, 72 RBI, 23 SB, 30 2B, 3 3B, .266/.328/.431

11) Bo Bichette - New York Mets

2026 Outlook: One of the true shocks of the offseason, Bichette was signed by the Mets to be their third baseman this year. Picking up that eligibility will boost his fantasy value dramatically and potentially hitting third behind Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto could put him in play for 120 RBI or so if he’s able to stay healthy all season. Hitting in that spot last season, Pete Alonso had the highest rate of plate appearances in the league with men on base. Bichette is elite with runners on because his primary weakness – swinging at pitches out of the zone – is somewhat neutralized. His profile reads like someone who could be among the top-five third basemen by season’s end again, should he stay healthy. Which is always a big if for Bichette.

2026 projection: (Mixed $11) 598 AB, 82 R, 20 HR, 88 RBI, 5 SB, 32 2B, 2 3B, .289/.339/.450

12) Trevor Story - Boston Red Sox

2026 Outlook: A bounceback not many saw coming, Story finished last season just outside the top-20 of all hitters in earned value. That was astounding because he was yet to play 100 games in a single season since before signing his mega-deal with the Red Sox ahead of the 2022 season and had years worth of declining underlying metrics. Not to mention a handful of significant injuries that had mounted. He’s still a free-swinger and will not run a high on-base percentage, but got back to hitting the ball hard and was one of the most efficient base stealers in the league being caught only once in 32 tries. The power and speed will probably be there again, the big risk in targeting Story just comes back to health.

2026 projection: (Mixed $5) 526 AB, 67 R, 20 HR, 71 RBI, 23 SB, 27 2B, 1 3B, .243/.299/.413

13) Corey Seager - Texas Rangers

2026 Outlook: Seager is what he is at this point in his career: one of the best offensive players in the league who will probably miss a solid chunk of the season due to injuries. He’s only played more than 150 games once since he turned 23 years old. Once! And he’s only played more than 130 three times over that same span. He’s also a difficult player to place in the shortstop landscape because he will not steal more than a handful of bases and most other players at this position are expected to steal lots of them. The right roster that hasn’t taken on too much injury risk and has a stable floor of stolen bases can fit him well, it will just take some careful manicuring.

2026 projection: (Mixed $9) 505 AB, 84 R, 27 HR, 76 RBI, 2 SB, 26 2B, 0 3B, .285/.365/.497

14) Willy Adames - San Francisco Giants

2026 Outlook: A poor shape to Adames’ debut season with the Giants has him entering 2026 as a value. Through the end of June, he had a .210/.297/.339 slash line with just nine homers and four stolen bases. From that point onward, he hit 27 homers, stole eight bases, and had an .854 OPS. That strong second half put him inside the top-30 of earned value among all players after the All-Star break and made him the first Giant since Barry Bonds to hit 30 homers in a season. Yes, really, since Bonds in 2004. Adames’ batting average never recovered though, and that’s a good reminder as to the hole in his fantasy profile. Just don’t let his first three poor months after signing a new contract cloud your judgment on him as a player.

2026 projection: (Mixed $4) 567 AB, 82 R, 25 HR, 75 RBI, 11 SB, 31 2B, 2 3B, .238/.326/.432

15) Jacob Wilson - Athletics

2026 Outlook: Wilson impressed as a rookie and would have won the American League batting title if not for Aaron Judge’s remarkable .331 average. Alas, we knew Wilson could hold a high batting average as a big leaguer, the surprise was his 13 homers after hitting none in nearly a month of action during his debut the season before. Of course, a lot of that power production could have been due to the extreme hitter-friendly confines of Sutter Field in Sacramento. That is a non-issue heading into this year though because his Athletics will be playing their home games there once again. It’s impressive that Wilson can pair his extreme contact ability with pulling a near league-average number of fly balls and that approach is perfect for his home park. A .300 batting average and 15 or so homers outside the first 150 picks is a fun chess piece for managers building their teams.

2026 projection: (Mixed $7) 592 AB, 84 R, 13 HR, 73 RBI, 7 SB, 34 2B, 2 3B, .307/.354/.438

16) Dansby Swanson - Chicago Cubs

2026 Outlook: In a position filled with upside, excitement, and plenty of dynamic players, Swanson represents a boring alternative. He will play every day, hit something like 20 home runs, steal around 20 bases, and accumulate enough runs and RBI without being a drain on your batting average to return top-100 value. It’s difficult to find a 20-20 player this cheap and Swanson’s stability is a blessing for any deep league team or one that took a few too many risks in the early part of their draft.

2026 projection: (Mixed $3) 542 AB, 71 R, 20 HR, 73 RBI, 16 SB, 24 2B, 3 3B, .247/.310/.413

17) Xavier Edwards - Miami Marlins

*also shortstop-eligible

2026 Outlook: After a rollicking close to the 2024 season, Edwards came out of the gate with a .263/.337/.291 slash line and just four stolen bases over the first six weeks last year. At that point, he was placed on the injured list with a back strain and replaced at shortstop by Otto López. When Edwards came back, he was installed as the Marlins’ second baseman and closed the season with a .292 batting average and 16 stolen bases over his final 97 games. That’s not quite the level of production we saw to conclude 2024, but one that was good enough to be among the top-10 second basemen by year's end. He profiles to be in that same range once again.

2026 projection: (Mixed $7) 580 AB, 77 R, 6 HR, 61 RBI, 30 SB, 24 2B, 6 3B, .291/.347/.384

18) Ezequiel Tovar - Colorado Rockies

2026 Outlook: Tovar has never seen a pitch he didn’t like. That’s led to some of the highest swing and chase rates in the league since he debuted. Given that, he has one of the game’s streakier offensive profiles. Some organizations more ready to win right now could hesitate to give Tovar a full-time job. That’s not a concern with the Rockies though! Plus, he’s a strong defensive shortstop which is all the more reason to run him out there every day and hope something clicks. Expect something like 20 homers, 10 stolen bases, and the dream of a high batting average. He, like the rest of his Rockies teammates, have increased value in daily-set leagues when you can start them at home in Coors Field and send them to the bench when the Rockies are on the road. It’s also worth noting that a hip injury then an oblique strain took more than two months out of his first half last season.

2026 projection: (Mixed $4) 577 AB, 72 R, 20 HR, 80 RBI, 8 SB, 33 2B, 4 3B, .265/.302/.440

19) Xander Bogaerts - San Diego Padres

2026 Outlook: Bogaerts rebounded reasonably well following a scary shoulder injury in 2024 and at least looks like a semi-useful offensive player again. He still has enough raw power to flirt with 20 home runs and just stole a career-high 20 bases. That plus his still solid hit tool should make him an incredibly boring sleeper that’s being taken outside the top-200 picks. Think about him like a more injury-prone Dansby Swanson.

2026 projection: (Mixed $3) 549 AB, 71 R, 16 HR, 74 RBI, 14 SB, 27 2B, 1 3B, .264/.331/.404

20) Konnor Griffin - Pittsburgh Pirates

2026 Outlook: Not to speak in hyperbole, but Griffin is the most gifted top prospect we’ve seen in quite some time and could take the entire league by storm. Think Ronald Acuña Jr. level. It’s plus-plus power, speed, defense, and contact ability with a howitzer for an arm. He just put up 21 home runs and 65 stolen bases with a .333 batting average and .941 OPS in his first season of pro ball. That wasn’t all in the low minors, either. He skipped the complex league altogether and closed the season with 21 games in Double-A where he didn’t miss a beat as a 19-year-old. He’s the best shortstop in the Pirates’ organization by far and should get a chance to show that at the big league level early on . If he winds up debuting before the Prospect Promotion Deadline (within two weeks of Opening Day) the Pirates can recoup compensation picks if he places in the top-three for Rookie of the Year this season or MVP before he qualifies for arbitration. That’s important for fantasy players because he could easily return top-50 value overall if he’s up and playing by mid-April.

2026 projection: (Mixed $2) 439 AB, 56 R, 12 HR, 54 RBI, 27 SB, 24 2B, 3 3B, .255/.315/.405

21) Colson Montgomery - Chicago White Sox

2026 Outlook: All Montgomery did during his 71 game debut for the White Sox last season was play at nearly a 50-homer pace and look like one of the best defensive shortstops in the league. Not too shabby. His power is unquestioned with an average swing speed between Nick Kurtz and Aaron Judge to go along with elite batted ball data. Also, and sometimes more important for young players like Montgomery, his batted ball distribution is excellent. He lifts the ball and pulls his fly balls far more than league average. That can take young players years to figure out and is why he so seamlessly converted his raw power to game power as a rookie. Of course, he comes with some massive risk as well. There’s a chance his whiff rate is untenable and pushes his strikeout rate past the near-30% mark it sat last year. Some elite young players like Kurtz and James Wood get by fine with the same issue, they just chase far fewer pitches out of the zone than Montgomery who does so at a rate slightly worse than league average. This is a tantalizing profile that could produce a top-30 value or need a stint in the minor leagues. Manage your risk wisely.

2026 projection: (Mixed $3) 541 AB, 76 R, 29 HR, 80 RBI, 4 SB, 22 2B, 2 3B, .231/.315/.440

Chris Bassitt and the Orioles’ Eternal Plan B

TORONTO, ONTARIO - OCTOBER 31: Chris Bassitt #40 of the Toronto Blue Jays pitches against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the ninth inning in game six of the 2025 World Series at Rogers Center on October 31, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s become something of an annual tradition in Birdland: the hot stove season heats up, the rumor mill churns out names of frontline starters, and Orioles fans allow themselves to dream. This year, it was Framber Valdez, the crafty lefty who’s been one of baseball’s most reliable arms. Mike Elias’s comments earlier this offseason suggested the team was ready to swim in the deep end, to finally make the kind of splash that announces championship intentions.

And then, as if on cue, the pivot. Valdez recently announced a $115 million deal with the Detroit Tigers, while the Orioles cashed in all their chips on … a one-year, $18.5M contract for Chris Bassitt.

Look the signing isn’t a disaster. It’s gotten mixed reviews here in Birdland, but nobody’s furious about it. Bassitt is a solid major league pitcher who posted respectable numbers in 2025, including a strong strikeout-to-innings ratio in the postseason. He’s durable, he’s experienced, and he knows how to navigate a lineup the third time through the order. He’s not chopped liver.

But he’s also not what we were promised. And that gap between expectation and reality has become uncomfortably familiar.

Cast your mind back a few offseasons. The names then were Dylan Cease and Max Fried—legitimate top-of-the-rotation arms who would have transformed the Orioles’ pitching staff. Instead, the team zigged when fans expected them to zag, opting for the safer, cheaper, shorter-term solution. Jordan Lyles. Kyle Gibson. Charlie Morton. Tomoyuki Sugano. Bassitt.

The pattern has become so predictable that it’s practically a signature of the Elias era: dream big in December, settle in January.

The question that nags at me isn’t whether Bassitt can help. He can. It’s whether this approach—the perpetual one-year deal, the endless bridge contracts, the faith that everything will break right—is actually a viable path to a championship. Because when you look around the American League East, the Orioles’ division rivals aren’t playing it safe. The Yankees have made moves. The Blue Jays have been aggressive. Even the Red Sox, who’ve had their own organizational soul-searching to do, have shown more willingness to commit.

The Orioles, meanwhile, are still asking us to trust the process.

And it’s true, the process could work. The best-case scenario for Baltimore’s 2025 rotation is genuinely exciting: Kyle Bradish returns to Cy Young form after his injury, Trevor Rogers replicates his magical comeback season, Shane Baz rediscovers his pre-injury stuff, and Zach Eflin’s back holds up. Add a steady Bassitt to that mix, and you’ve got something.

But that’s an awful lot of ifs. It’s a rotation built on the assumption that everyone hits a ceiling they’ve reached, in most cases, exactly once. It’s a plan that requires the baseball gods to smile on Baltimore while frowning on everyone else. It’s hope dressed up as strategy.

Maybe I’m being too harsh. Results have a way of silencing concerns about process, and if the Orioles surprise everyone and make a deep October run, I’ll happily eat these words. Good outcomes quiet the haters, myself potentially included.

But here’s what bothers me: this has become a philosophy, not just a tactic. Don’t draft pitchers high. Avoid the raw high school talent. Squeeze value out of waiver wire pickups and veterans willing to bet on themselves with short-term deals. It’s smart, in its way—analytically defensible, fiscally responsible, low-risk in any individual transaction.

It’s also not inspiring. And it’s not how you build a champion.

The Tampa Bay Rays have been doing this dance for years, finding value in the margins, developing what they have, never quite spending like the big boys. They’ve been to one World Series this century. They lost. At some point, you have to wonder whether the ceiling on this approach is “perpetually competitive” rather than “champion.”

The Orioles have a young core that’s ready to win now. Gunnar Henderson isn’t getting any cheaper. Adley Rutschman’s window is open. The time to push the chips to the center of the table is now, not in some hypothetical future when all the one-year deals finally add up to something.

Chris Bassitt will take the ball every fifth day and give the Orioles a chance to win. That’s valuable. But when you’re chasing a championship, “giving yourself a chance” isn’t the same as “going for it.” And after another offseason of watching the Orioles linked to aces only to settle for something less, it’s hard not to feel like we’re watching the same movie for the third or fourth time.

Plan B can work. Sometimes the backup option turns out to be the right call all along.

But it sure would be nice, just once, to see what Plan A looks like.

Zack Littell: Yay or nay?

Los Angeles, CA - October 01: Starting pitcher Zach Littell #52 of the Cincinnati Reds throws to the plate against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the second inning of game 2 of a National League wild card series baseball game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Wednesday, October 1, 2025. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

I’m not gonna make a case, or talk about how it depends on price. You can do that.

Littell is the only free agent remaining who A) does not require loss of a draft pick, and B) is projected by a blend of Steamer and ZiPS to produce over 1.5 WAR in 2026.

Do with that what you will.

Yankees 26-man roster prediction for 2026 season

The 2025 season did not end the way the Yankees envisioned.

After making the World Series in 2024, the Yanks were bounced by the Blue Jays in the ALDS. It was a disappointing end for a team that was tied for the most wins in the American League, but New York believes there is unfinished business. That's why GM Brian Cashman is running it back in 2026.

For better or worse, the Yankees are hoping a full season with midseason acquisitions Ryan McMahon, Jose Caballero and David Bednar will help them get back to the World Series. They are also banking on the return of Gerrit Cole, who underwent Tommy John surgery before the 2025 season, to bolster a rotation that was already one of the best in the AL. 

However, Cole won't be back by Opening Day and he's not the only one. Anthony Volpe and Carlos Rodon will miss time and start the season on the IL. That leaves a few spots open on the 26-man roster.

So, as Yankees pitchers and catchers report, here is our first 26-man roster prediction for the 2026 season…

Starting Lineup

Trent Grisham: CF
Aaron Judge: RF
Cody Bellinger: LF
Ben Rice: 1B
Giancarlo Stanton: DH
Jazz Chisholm Jr.: 2B
Ryan McMahon: 3B
Jose Caballero: SS
Austin Wells: C

This is the easy part.

The Yankees are running it back, and the everyday starting lineup will look very similar to what it was in the final months of 2025. Barring any injuries, the usual regulars will play, with McMahon and Rice manning the corners.

A year ago, Paul Goldschmidt was the starting first baseman, but Rice's bat is too important to leave on the bench. 

With Volpe on the shelf, Caballero will be the starting shortstop for now. The Yanks will see if Caballero can make the position his own before Volpe returns. If Caballero struggles, Volpe will regain the starting job and Caballero will be relegated to the bench.

Sep 23, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Jose Caballero (72) reacts after hitting a walk off single against the Chicago White Sox during the ninth inning at Yankee Stadium.
Sep 23, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Jose Caballero (72) reacts after hitting a walk off single against the Chicago White Sox during the ninth inning at Yankee Stadium. / John Jones-Imagn Images

Rotation

Max Fried: LHP
Cam Schlittler: RHP
Luis Gil: RHP}
Ryan Yarbrough: LHP
Will Warren: RHP
Ryan Weathers: RHP

With Cole, Rodon, and Clarke Schmidt on the IL to start the season, it's likely the Yankees will begin the year with a six-man rotation. 

The rationale is two-fold. 

It'll limit the number of innings for the youngsters and Fried, who threw a career high 195.1 innings in 2025. It'll also reduce how many starts are needed by Yarbrough or Paul Blackburn before Cole and Rodon return. I'll say Yarbrough will get the nod to make some spot starts, but manager Aaron Boone said in his news conference on the first day of pitchers and catchers that when those starters return, he could slide an arm or two into the bullpen. 

Miami Marlins starting pitcher Ryan Weathers (35) pitches in the first inning against the Washington Nationals at loanDepot Park.
Miami Marlins starting pitcher Ryan Weathers (35) pitches in the first inning against the Washington Nationals at loanDepot Park. / Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

The Yankees traded for Weathers, so he seems like a lock to make the initial rotation along with Schlittler, Gil, and Warren, who all showed they can pitch in the big leagues. The six-man rotation will also help Weathers stay healthy after making just eight starts a year ago. 

Bullpen

David Bednar: RHP
Camilo Doval: RHP
Jake Bird: RHP
Osvaldo Bido: RHP
Fernando Cruz: RHP
Tim Hill: LHP
Angel Chivilli: RHP

I predict the arms in the bullpen will be asked to do some heavy lifting, at least in the early going. Hopefully, Fried and the rest of the starters give length in March/April to give Bednar, Doval, Cruz and the rest of the high-leverage guys some rest in between outings. But outside of those three, there aren't a lot of locks.

The Yanks picked up Hill's option, so he'll start as the lone lefty in the bullpen. That leaves three more spots to choose from. 

Bird was one of the relievers Cashman picked up at last year's trade deadline, and he did not pan out. He made three appearances in pinstripes and allowed six runs across 2.0 innings. He was sent down to Triple-A, where he remained for the duration of the season. But now, the right-hander has a chance to figure things out under the watchful eye of the Yankees trainers and coaches. 

I believe he'll do enough to earn a spot, and if he struggles, he still has minor league options. 

And for that final spot, Bido is an intriguing option. The Yankees claimed him off waivers from the Athletics after a rough 2025. But Bido had a strong 2024, striking out 63 batters across 63.1 innings and pitching to a 3.41 ERA. Perhaps the Yankees get the 30-year-old back to that point this spring. 

And then there's Chivilli, whom the Yanks acquired from the Rockies in January. The hard-throwing righty has not had success in the majors thus far (6.18 ERA across 73 appearances), but he has the stuff to potentially make him a great fit for the bullpen. Perhaps taking Chivilli out of Coors Field and having the Yankees' pitching lab mold him into a competent reliever could revitalize his career in the same way they made Cruz into a household name.

Bench

Amed Rosario: INF
Paul Goldschmidt: 1B
J.C. Escarra: C
Oswaldo Cabrera: UTIL

And here's where things get kind of interesting.

Rosario, Goldschmidt, and Escarra are locks, but the Yankees need a fourth outfielder. I believe Jasson Dominguez will start the season in Triple-A. He has options, and regular at-bats and playing time are what the young switch-hitter needs right now. 

That opens up the door for Cabrera. And while most of his time has been spent playing the infield, he has appeared in over 100 games in the outfield, including 92 starts. 

Rosario also has experience playing the outfield, but the versatility Cabrera provides, as well as being a switch-hitter, gives him the edge over others like a Spencer Jones. The team is too left-handed as is.

What’s the best trade the Phillies never made?

LAKELAND , FL - MARCH 4: Infielder Ryan Howard of the Philadelphia Phillies looks on against the Detroit Tigers during a Spring Training game on March 4, 2005 at Marchant Stadium in Lakeland, Florida. The Tigers defeated the Phillies 3-0. (Photo by Rick Stewart/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Trades can alter the direction of any team. They could bring a team it’s last piece to win a championship, or a key contributor to turn a team into a real contender, or a trade could signal the beginning of a rebuild. Every year at the end of July we all obsess over the latest trade gossip to see who’s going where and for how much.

But what about the trades that don’t happen? Yes, it may be a hackneyed phrase, but sometimes the best trade you can do is the one you don’t make. Sometimes it’s a blessing in disguise that a proposed trade isn’t accepted.

For the Phillies, there’s at least one trade that never materialized that stands out. In 2004, Jim Thome was in the second year of his groundbreaking (literally and figuratively) six year, $85M free agent deal with the Phillies. Thome, a bona-fide star and future Hall of Famer, was brought to Philadelphia to usher in a new era of Phillies baseball as the team broke ground on their brand-new ballpark. Gone were the days of “small market” talk and perpetual cellar dwelling. The Phillies intended to get better, and Thome was to lead the charge.

But there was a situation brewing by late in the 2004 season. A young first base prospect named Ryan Howard was destroying pitching across the minor leagues, having advanced to Triple-A by the end of the season. It was becoming abundantly clear that Howard was ready for the Big Leagues and possibly had a bright future ahead of him, but there was nowhere on the Phillies for him to play. Both Howard and Thome were locked at first base and seeing that the DH was of course not yet in the National League, the Phillies had to choose between the two.

It appeared in the summer of 2004 they almost did, as Dejan Kovacevic of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette later reported in 2007. The Phillies had offered Howard in a trade to the Pirates in exchange for Kris Benson, a 29-year-old starting pitcher. Reportedly, the Pirates turned the trade down because they believed they already had a prospect of Howard’s caliber in Brad Eldred. Instead, the Pirates traded Benson to the Mets in exchange for two future Phillies in Ty Wigginton and Jose Bautista, while the Phillies eventually chose to keep Howard and send Thome to the White Sox before the 2005 season.

As is abundantly obvious by now, that non-trade worked out pretty well for the Phillies. Howard went on to win Rookie of the Year in 2005, MVP in 2006, and a World Series championship in 2008, cementing himself among the Phillies all-time greatest players. Benson meanwhile pitched for four more seasons after 2004, appearing in 69 games with a 4.73 ERA for the Mets, Orioles, Rangers, and Diamondbacks before retiring following the 2010 season. Brad Eldred, the player the Pirates believed was on the same caliber as Howard, meanwhile played 90 total career games in the Majors between 2005 and 2012 and was worth -1.3 WAR.

But this is just one example from Phillies lore of a trade that didn’t happen that turned out to be for the best. In your opinion, what’s the best trade the Phillies never made?

Friday morning Rangers things

Good morning, LSB.

The Rangers were dealt a fairly devastating blow Thursday as top prospect Sebastian Walcott will miss most or all of the 2026 season due to a UCL tear. Woof.

Walcott will reportedly undergo surgery in the coming days, though there’s still some stuff to be discussed with ol’ Dr. Meister.

There’s also enough injury news elsewhere to warrant an Evan Grant injury update 4 days into camp.

Rangers bullpen hand Chris Martin has the inside track on the closer role.

Jacob deGrom is back on the mound after his stellar 2025 and still looking to get better.

MLB Pipeline takes a guess at each team’s top prospect in 2028.

And Grant did a live Q&A segment here where he answered early spring training questions from Rangers fans.

That’s all for this morning. Happy Friday!

Mets 26-man roster prediction 2.0 for 2026 MLB season

Since our way-too-early Mets 26-man roster prediction last month, plenty of things have changed.

The Mets made some intriguing acquisitions, it was revealed thatJuan Soto is moving from right field to left field, and Francisco Lindor underwent surgery for a stress reaction to his left hamate bone.

In light of all of those moving parts, here is our roster prediction 2.0 for what the team will look like on Opening Day...

REGULAR LINEUP

Francisco Alvarez: C
Jorge Polanco: 1B
Marcus Semien: 2B
Francisco Lindor: SS
Bo Bichette: 3B
Juan Soto: LF
Luis Robert Jr.: CF
Carson Benge: RF
Brett Baty: DH

There are four big questions here: Will Lindor be ready for Opening Day, will Polanco see most of his time at first base, who will the regular right fielder be, and who will get the bulk of the at-bats at designated hitter?

The Mets' expectation is that Lindor, who had surgery for a stress reaction to his left hamate bone, will be ready to go. A surgeon SNY spoke with had similar optimism about Lindor's timeline and prognosis

Polanco has been at camp early continuing to get acclimated to first base, including drills on Thursday where he was making scoops on balls in the dirt.

Feb 12, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; New York Mets infielder Jorge Polanco (11) takes infield practice during spring training.
Feb 12, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; New York Mets infielder Jorge Polanco (11) takes infield practice during spring training. / Jim Rassol - Imagn Images

As far as right field, president of baseball operations David Stearns said after breaking the news of Soto's move to left that Benge remains firmly in the mix to win a job. 

Benge has plenty of experience in right field, including 26 games last season in the minors. And he was primarily a right fielder during his college career with Oklahoma State. 

"I think evaluations in spring are always a little bit fraught, and we know that," Stearns noted when asked what the team would factor in while deciding on Benge. "We want to see quality at-bats, we want to see him handle the outfield. It's also gonna depend on what some other guys do, right? It's not all going to be dependent on how Carson looks."

When it comes to DH, that feels like a spot that should be split between Baty and Mark Vientos. Yes, Baty can fill in at third base, second base, right field, and perhaps first base. But his best chance for consistent at-bats could be at DH. 

STARTING ROTATION

Freddy Peralta: RHP
Nolan McLean: RHP
Sean Manaea: LHP
Clay Holmes: RHP
David Peterson: LHP
Kodai Senga: RHP

With the Mets having six legitimate big league starting pitching options, using a six-man rotation is a possibility.

And it's something Stearns said would be a good problem to have.

"I think we'll cross that bridge if we get to it," Stearns explained on Thursday. "We've got six healthy guys feeling really good right now. If we have six healthy guys feeling really good on Opening Day, I will gladly work through that challenge at that point. And we may decide at times to go with a six-man, or we may not. We'll figure that out. That's a really good problem to have if that's where we are on Opening Day."

If the Mets are fully healthy and don't go with a regular six-man rotation from the jump, it's fair to believe that either Peterson or Senga would be ticketed for the bullpen. But Senga doesn't seem like a great fit for the role given his meticulous routine. 

Beyond the main six expected starters is intriguing depth.

Sep 18, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets starting pitcher Jonah Tong (21) pitches against the San Diego Padres during the first inning at Citi Field.
Sep 18, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets starting pitcher Jonah Tong (21) pitches against the San Diego Padres during the first inning at Citi Field. / Brad Penner - Imagn Images

Jonah Tong, who showed serious flashes during his debut late last season, figures to open the season with Triple-A Syracuse.

The 22-year-old made only two starts in Triple-A last season before being promoted to the majors, so it's fair to believe he can benefit from the ability to refine his arsenal there for a bit before coming back up.

Then there's Christian Scott, who missed the entire 2025 season while recovering from Tommy John surgery but who should be fully healthy and ready to go. And the recently-acquired Tobias Myers is stretching out as a starter.

Meanwhile, prospects Jonathan Santucci and Jack Wenninger could possibly reach the majors in 2026.

BULLPEN

Devin Williams: CLS
Luke Weaver: RHP
Brooks Raley: LHP
Luis Garcia: RHP
Tobias Myers: RHP
Craig Kimbrel: RHP
Bryan Hudson: LHP

Williams, Weaver, Raley, and Garcia are locks. And A.J. Minter will be in the 'pen once he's fully healthy. But Minter isn't expected to be in big league action until early May.

While Myers can be optioned to the minors, there's really no reason for the Mets to go that route unless they're facing a serious numbers crunch.

May 5, 2025; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Tobias Myers (36) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Houston Astros at American Family Field.
May 5, 2025; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Tobias Myers (36) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Houston Astros at American Family Field. / Jeff Hanisch - Imagn Images

Myers was used mainly as a starter in 2024 before transitioning to mostly a relief role in 2025 -- and Stearns suggested after acquiring him that Myers will be used in relief, with the Mets having the ability to stretch him out if needed. 

In 28.1 innings over 16 appearances as a reliever in 2025, Myers had a 1.91 ERA and 0.91 WHIP while posting a strikeout to walk rate of 6.67.

Kimbrel is a bit of a wild card after signing a minor league deal, but it's fair to believe he'll get a shot if his stuff looks good during spring training. While Kimbrel doesn't throw nearly as hard as he did in his heyday, he still misses plenty of bats. 

Then there's Hudson, who was acquired via trade earlier this week. He was tremendous in 2024 for the Brewers, during what was his first full big league season. In 62.1 innings over 43 games, Hudson had a 1.73 ERA (3.60 FIP) and 0.72 WHIP while striking out 62.

Standing at 6'8", Hudson gets elite extension from a low-angle delivery (he was in the 99th percentile last season). He featured mainly a four-seam fastball and sweeper in 2025. In 2024, Hudson also relied heavily on a cutter, which he threw 24 percent of the time (Hudson threw the cutter just three percent of the time last season).

Hudson is out of minor league options, which means the Mets cannot send him to the minors without exposing him to waivers. 

Huascar Brazoban and Adbert Alzolay can both be real contributors, but might be frozen out initially.

Other options include hard-throwing prospects Dylan Ross and Ryan Lambert, as well as Jonathan Pintaro, Alex Carrillo, and Joey Gerber

BENCH

Tyrone Taylor: OF
Luis Torrens: C
Mark Vientos: INF
Vidal Brujan: UTIL

Barring a trade, Taylor, Torrens, and Vientos are locks.

And if the Mets go with a six-man rotation, that leaves just one more bench spot.

One option is the recently-signed MJ Melendez, an outfielder with some pop who is coming off a down season. 

But no one can match the positional versatility of Brujan, who is able to play literally every spot except catcher -- and can provide insurance at shortstop. 

Dodgers to open 2026 season with six-man rotation

TORONTO, ONTARIO - NOVEMBER 02: (L-R) Shohei Ohtani #17, Yoshinobu Yamamoto #18, Blake Snell #7, and Tyler Glasnow #31 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pose with the Commissioner's Trophy in the locker room after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 in game seven to win the 2025 World Series at Rogers Center on November 02, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers didn’t do much at all to add to their starting rotation this offseason, and they didn’t need to.

Boasting one of the most dominant pitching staffs in not just their own division, but all of baseball, the Dodgers enter the 2026 season with a plethora of rotational options. The quartet of All-Stars is cemented at the top, but following is a free-for-all of young talent vying to either get their first real shot as a starter or to make themselves known again after their 2025 seasons were wiped away due to injury, i.e. Gavin Stone and River Ryan.

With Roki Sasaki penciled into the rotation, the team already flaunts a dynamic five-man rotation, but, as Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register tweets, the Dodgers will open up the 2026 season with a six-man rotation. Plunkett notes that this will allow pitchers such as Sasaki, Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto to maintain their one start per week routine.

Links

Old friend Chris Taylor is headed back to the Angels for the 2026 season, per Jon Heyman of the New York Post. Heyman did not specify whether it was a major league deal or a minor league deal with an invite to spring training.

After being released by the Dodgers during the 2025 season, Taylor played in 30 games with the Angels, slashing .179/.278/.321 with two home runs and 10 RBI while posting -0.1 fWAR.

The Dodgers needed to do one thing before wrapping up their offseason agenda, and that they did on Thursday by bringing back Kiké Hernández for the 2026 season, writes Sonja Chen of MLB.com.

Hernández, like Phillips (Tommy John surgery) and righty reliever Brock Stewart (shoulder surgery), will be an in-season reinforcement for the back-to-back World Series champions once he returns to full health. His signing is one of the finishing touches on a Dodgers roster that kept its core intact while bringing in star power (Kyle Tucker and Edwin Díaz) to address its biggest holes.

For the first time in 19 years, Clayton Kershaw will not be with the Dodgers in Arizona, and Dave Roberts has already noticed a different vibe without him in the clubhouse, per Plunkett.

“When we get to spring training at Camelback and not seeing his locker where it’s been for 17 years, 18 years, it’s gonna be different,” said Dave Roberts, the Dodgers’ manager for the last 10 years of Kershaw’s career. “The presence, seeing No. 22 out there early, doing sprints, seeing him in the weight room, knowing it’s Kershaw Day (when he pitched), not having that – it’s different.”