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Tehol has Game of Thrones, Grey has reality shows, Jay has Star Trek, Sky has Netflix, and Mike has... I have no idea if Mike even owns a T.V.. I have The Walking Dead (best scene ever!). I was one of those viewers that didn't jump in until Season 4 after power-watching the first three seasons on Netflix. The geniuses who created TWD have now given us a new perspective on the zombie apocalypse in Fear The Walking Dead. The show takes us through the zombie apocalypse in a large urban area, Los Angeles, from day one. Each episode building on the other as people discover and deal with their quickly changing world. Fighting to grasp this new reality while wanting normalcy to return. You might be wondering what this has to do with the RCL Update? It has plenty... looking back on the season ,we leave draft day with all the hope and confidence in our fortune telling skills. When injury or poor play strikes, we think it will be fixed quickly and everything will be okay. Then tragedy keeps hitting us in the face and things unravel pretty quickly as our DL gets filled up and by the end we can barely recognize our teams. Right now, your team better be more Walking Dead and less Fear the Walking Dead, with a hodgepodge of "where did that guy come from" and "I thought this streamer retired" (I'm talking about Eduardo Escobar and Jake Peavy). Anythehoo, I love the shows and can turn them into an analogy for any struggle in life and if you ain't ever struggled through a fantasy season then get a tougher league.

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See all of today’s starting lineups

# MLB Starting Lineups For Sun 6/15
ARI | ATH | ATL | BAL | BOS | CHC | CHW | CIN | CLE | COL | DET | HOU | KC | LAA | LAD | MIA | MIL | MIN | NYM | NYY | PHI | PIT | SD | SEA | SF | STL | TB | TEX | TOR | WSH | OAK
Don't you know about Greg Bird?  Bird Bird Bird, Bird is the buy! Bird Bird Bird, Bird is the buy! Bird Bird Bird, Bird is the buy!  I, honestly, figured you would've heard.  Heard what, you ask.  Bird Bird Bird, Bird is the buy!  Bird Bird Bird, Bird is the buy!  Bird Bird Bird, Bird is the buy!  Well, everybody said about Greg Bird that Bird Bird Bird, Bird is the buy!  Bird Bird Bird, Bird is the buy!  Bird Bird Bird, Bird is the buy!  You know, I thought you'd heard.  Heard what?  About the Bird!  I was watching a TV show on cybercrime recently, and I have an idea on how to attack North Korea.  Just pump in the "Bird is the Word" song into their national Bose speakers.  (If North Korea has taken over the US by the time you read this, this cyber attack could be used in the reverse direction.  I'm yours, Kimchi Jong-il, however you want to use me.  I am very loyal.)  So, now that we know the word and that word is indeed Bird, what do we do with this info?  We pick him up in our leagues.  He has seven homers in only 29 games.  Sample size, she says.  Well, he had six homers in only 34 games in Triple-A, six homers in only 49 Double-A games, seven homers in only 27 games in Double-A last year...Do you see a pattern?  Bird's got power.  Not really anything else, but there's only two weeks left, grab him if you need homers.  Or had you not heard?  Bird Bird Bird, Bird-- Okay, I'll stop.  Anyway, here's some more players to buy or sell this week in fantasy baseball:
I am a realist.  Not everyone is down with the rationale of being hip to pitching and ditching.  That statement is both literal and figurative.  We now have three weeks remaining of games.  I mean, you either want to win and go for it with whatever you have at your discretion, or you will just listen to the piper playing and roll off the side of the mountain with the other lemmings that will go by the best names possible on my roster wins.   Sorry if I stand here in my skidz pajamas and call you stupid, but you stupid.  Go to the bathroom, smash your head into the sink, and then splash some water your face.  It ain't over until it's over, it wasn't over when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and it ain't over now.  Go to our waiver wire, listen to what I have to say about streaming... It's really simple: Pitch twice and ditch, regardless of outcome or what J-FOH says about pitching, because little league was 25 years ago and pitching donuts is different than actually knowing baseball.  So here is some late season K/9, usage and trends that I have noticed that's going on with the bullpens in the past few days.  Cheers!
While I like to come up with witty original titles, I realize that today's has already been played. So has "Cespedes For The Rest of Us", another solid specimen. I tried to figure out a way to use the video game Centipede, but came up empty. So I decided I would just recycle. There's no getting around it, today's post needed to center on [player]Yoenis Cespedes[/player]. With 139 points, no other batter has scored as many points as Yoenis in the last 28 days. During that stretch he has 15 homers, 34 RBIs and 28 runs scored. He leads all batters in all three of those categories. He even has 3 triples and 2 stolen bases. Cespedes is like a man obsessed. Obsesspedes! I'd love to know how many teams that have made the fantasy playoffs have him on their roster.
Hi everyone, I'm Sky the Razzball guy. You might remember me from such hits as 'Duffy The Cam-Yard K'er'...I mean it was just last Friday so if you read this site at all and the DK content, I'd hope you caught that. In that piece we looked under the hood at the Orioles and their offense, namely their poor numbers against lefty pitchers and guess what? A week hasn't changed those numbers. In fact, after getting shut out for 7 innings by Matt Moore who K'd up 9 of them, I'd bet today's numbers would tell you they're even worse. That said, we should complete the thought process by taking that peek again and hold the phone cuz you'll never guess this but...yeah, they still suck against lefties to the tune of a 23% K rate and a meager 85 wRC+. With that, in steps Drew Smyly who himself is coming off an 11 K performance against what was a surging Boston Red Sox offense. Cash? Check. GPP? Double check. I'm gonna have a hard time moving off Drew in any format today so while everyone talks chalk with you today, realize at $9,400 you could be getting the sweeter deal when talking about those 10K+ priced arms. So put a Smyly on your face and move on with me to for the coverage of the rest of this tilt...hrm, reference Zoolander in the title, put a Zoolander pic in the opening, and then don't actually reference Zoolander? That's ridiculous, I should be ashamed so let me make up for it. Here's my Orange Mocha Frappuccino takes for this Friday DK slate... New to DraftKings? Scared of feeling like a small fish in a big pond? Well try out this 15 teamer of Razzball writers and friends to wet your DK whistle. Just remember to sign up through us before you do. It’s how we know you care! If you still feel helpless and lonely, be sure to subscribe to the DFSBot for your daily baseball plays.
Yesterday, Chris Coghlan went full Ivan Drago on Jung-ho Kang's knee, taking him out in a hard slide.  Kang is now done for the year, and could miss a month of next season, with a torn MCL.  That's not the year 1150, if any Romans are reading this.  He also has a fractured fibia.  Coghlan should not be allowed to wear that Iron Mike Sharpe knee pad.  Things couldn't be much worse for the Pirates, who will now rely on Jordache Mercer (full name).  Kang's agent said, "It is unfortunate that what would be considered heads up baseball would cause such a serious injury.  That said, Coghlan was playing the game the way it should be played."  Doesn't that sound backhanded?  Like, "It's a shame we allow 85-year-old people to drive, but that's the law and thanks for crashing into my car."  Anyway, here's what else I saw yesterday in fantasy baseball:
Over the past couple of weeks, I've written about a few of the specific hitters and starting pitchers who I felt might be useful as well as a few who might struggle during the remainder of the 2015 MLB regular season. With just over two weeks remaining until our fantasy fates are determined, I'd like to focus on the types of players who are worth targeting and avoiding down the stretch, aka the final bears and bulls of the season. As Judge Alvin Valkenheiser would say, it's "last chance saloon" to make a few key moves and take home your league titles, so let's get to work. Here are the types of players that I'm bearish on over the next couple of weeks:
How much stacking is too much stacking? I mean, the reward is obviously there, but so is the risk. It's an approach I took with my season-long league this year, as my starting lineup had Ben Revere, Troy Tulowitzki, Edwin Encarnacion, Josh Donaldson and Jose Bautista in each day for a categories league. It worked well enough to earn me a first-round bye, but it's risky because if the Blue Jays had an off-series, I was screwed. It's the same approach with DFS. You want to stack hoping it hits, but if it doesn't, you just wasted your money. Ballpark comes into play, and so does the pitcher. Today, I'm risking it, even if Turner Field isn't great. Line me up some Blue Jays, good sir. Straight to the cash, homie. New to DraftKings? Scared of feeling like a small fish in a big pond? Well try out this 20 teamer of Razzball writers and friends to wet your DK whistle. Just remember to sign up through us before you do. It’s how we know you care! If you still feel helpless and lonely, be sure to subscribe to the DFSBot for your daily baseball plays.
The original title Rudy suggested was, Love Is To Own Lindor, but Rudy tells me that title only makes sense to people forced to watch Frozen 5+ times.  Let it go...Let it go...Let it go...  I just sang that in perfect key and it still caused a cat to screech and paint to peel.  Luckily, I don't have a kid, a cat or paint.  Let's count the ways I love Francisco Lindor.  *five minutes later, makes farting sound with hand in armpit*  And that's it!  Oh, yeah, I should count the ways I love him aloud so you can hear.  Fair enough, you nitpicker, you.  Yesterday, he hit his 9th homer (3-for-4, 4 RBIs), topping off a week when he was hitting over .400, a month when he's hitting over .340, a 2nd half when he's hitting over .350 with 7 homers and 7 steals.  He's only 21 years old.  At 21 years old, you fell asleep on a couch outside of your local bar waiting to talk a girl that you think might have been interested, only waking after a passing bus splashed a puddle of your own vomit onto you.  Guys and five girl readers, he has 9 homers in 82 games (essentially a half a season) and he has 30-steal speed.  I just got goose pimplies.  To emphasize them, I'm drawing little goose faces on my pimples like those psychopaths draw on grains of rice.  Yes, you should own Lindor on your teams for this year, and I can't wait to draft him in sixteen after twenty.  Anyway, here's what else I saw yesterday in fantasy baseball:
Chris Davis currently leads the big leagues with 42 home runs. His .263/.358/.562 triple slash heading into Monday's game equates to a 148 wRC+ and .389 wOBA, both ranking in the top-10 of qualified hitters. So why am I down on the left-handed hitting masher? Davis is doing his usual dominant performance against right-handed pitchers, however this season he's crushing southpaws too. It's a new development and is worth checking out, even in the limited context of a single season platoon split. The table below displays Davis' numbers against left-handers from 2008 through 2014 compared to this season. Admittedly the sample size difference is significant, but the table highlights how much better he's been this year than in previous seasons.
This is the “no-man’s land” of prospects – that time between the end of the minor league regular season and the the start of the offseason leagues. That makes it a natural point to look back on the year that was. This next series of posts will focus on a breakout prospect from each team, broken down by division. These are players who “broke out” statistically in 2015 and were either ranked in the bottom half of their team’s preseason top ten list or didn’t make their team’s list at all. Some of these names will look familiar and have already been scooped up in many dynasty formats. Others may still be flying low enough that their big performances have gone undetected. Today we’ll look at five breakout prospects from the AL Central.
I start my lineups these days in one place: the starting pitcher. They're the fulcrum upon which all things must work. You can find way more diamonds in the rough among the hitters than you can on the hill, so it behooves you to focus on this position first before attacking the rest. That doesn't mean you can't target hitters, especially when there are Coors games and the like, but those hitters aren't going to lift you as high if there is a SP in your slots working a negative number. That said, it doesn't mean you should just pop the first two pitchers you come to in the salary list and then mine the lineups for values. That happens sometimes, but what you should really do is look at the SP trends, matchups, splits, parks, swinging strike and K-rates to whittle down the slate to a few good men you could live with for the night. Oh I've gone through this process and ended up with some strange birds on the hill. There was a night this season where Joe Blanton, patron saint of gas cans, actually went into Safeco and helped me to a nice payday. Recently, even, Kris Medlen has been helpful with his low salary and decent performances, allowing me to target more prime bats. As I look at the slate for Wednesday, I was hoping I could log on, take a quick glance and know where I was going, but I couldn't. This was because the best two SP on the slate happened to be the highest paid as well: David Price, SP: $12,500 Jake Arrieta, SP: $14,000 Price in Atlanta and Arrieta in Pittsburgh were, at first glance, the best SP, so I had to dig deeper just to be sure and, sure enough, they came through the process on top. Since they are so high priced, about 6K more than I like to dedicate to the cause, I didn't automatically ink them in the lineup until I could see if there was indeed enough value in the hitters to make it work. Looking down the list, it was clear that I could roster two or three Phillies, who can hit a lefty fairly well and have a nice home park, to make it happen. Facing Gio Gonzalez, who has a mid 4s SIERA and nearly 800 OPS vs. righties over the last 30 days also made it easy to go that route. So I did. It looks like a newb move, rosting the top two SP of the night, but you have to trust your process. Other nights, I would lay up short well short of this $$ commitment at SP, but tonight, it's pay up. New to DraftKings? Scared of feeling like a small fish in a big pond? Well try out this 25 teamer of Razzball writers and friends to wet your DK whistle. Just remember to sign up through us before you do. It’s how we know you care! If you still feel helpless and lonely, be sure to subscribe to the DFSBot for your daily baseball plays.