LOGIN
Once again a New York team makes a huge free agency splash. The big news from yesterday in free agency was Jose Peraza signing with the Yankees. With the loss of Tyler Wade, the Yankees could not afford to go into the season with Gio Urshela at short without an All-Star caliber shortstop backup. At the press conference, Brian Cashman stepped up to the mic and misquoted Jay-Z, saying, "I'm not a cash man, I'm a Cashman." Reporters' hands shot up to ask questions, and Cashman called on one in the front row, who asked, "Is it true you signed Jose Peraza because of his ability to do a well-choreographed handshake in the dugout after someone else does something good?" Cashman screamed, "NO MORE QUESTIONS!" and ran off the stage. Then a title comes on the screen that reads, "Three weeks ago..." This is the opening to my Freaky Friday-like role reversal movie where the Yankees become the Mets and Vice Versa, another great role reversal film. The Mets as the Yankees are Fred Savage and Lindsay Lohan in this equation. Mets signed Max Scherzer, while the Yankees' fans watched Jose Peraza do a really cool handshake. "Yanks gonna bring back Clint Frazier on a minor league deal and trade him for Max Scherzer, right? Right?!" That's Twitter user, BingBong27rings. Anyway, Max Scherzer for 2022 fantasy baseball and other free agency news:

Learn more about our 2025 Fantasy Baseball Subscriptions!

The best daily/weekly player rankings/projections (hitters, starters, and relievers) for each of the next 7-10 days + next calendar week starting Friday. Kick-ass DFS lineup optimizer and projections for DraftKings, FanDuel, and Yahoo!.

I don’t have enough spam, give me the Razzball email newsletter!

Weekly Razzball news delivered straight to your inbox.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

See all of today’s starting lineups

# MLB Starting Lineups For Wed 5/21
ARI | ATH | ATL | BAL | BOS | CHC | CHW | CIN | CLE | COL | DET | HOU | KC | LAA | LAD | MIA | MIL | MIN | NYM | NYY | PHI | PIT | SD | SEA | STL | TB | TEX | TOR | WSH | OAK | SF
It’s your favorite hour of the week!  The Not Not News is back with all the Billy Hurley jokes and Grey Albright cackles you can handle. This week, a Dartmouth professor makes her way into the Guinness Book of World Records by constructing a 9-foot tall gaming joystick. Then a bear walks into a 7-11 to use their hand sanitizer, and Will Smith (the actor) opens up about some sexual disorders he's struggled with in the past. Listen to the entire show below, now 100% free of charge! Here are this week's stories so you can follow along:
Welp, we were supposed to start our fantasy baseball sleepers today, but there was some movement before the lockout. *looks in the toilet* "Hey, we got movement!" By the way, for those of you who didn't hear my thoughts on the impending lockout, you can listen to the last episode of our fantasy baseball podcast. Basically, I expect them to go to their separate corners. Owners will cry poor; players will cry that the owners are crying poor, which will be accurate, and then they'll come back. My guess is we lose about a week of the season and gain the NL DH. It will seem dire, because a lot of reporters are on team payrolls and they're paid to make it seem dire. It won't be as dire as it seems, unless we get to May and still no baseball. Bright side of that would be Acuña will be ready for Opening Day. Lowercase yay! Any hoo! We'll start the sleepers as soon as teams stop signing big free agents -- we (I) did start my 2022 fantasy baseball rankings on our Patreon, by the by. The Mets went out and got Mark Canha and Starling Marte, as they remade their outfield. The A’s did their best to change their culture, club wasn't working around players like Canha and Kaprelian but those windows of opportunity come and go. They come and go. Boy, Jorge Soler would fit nicely there. The best thing about the addition of Mark Canha and Starling Marte is they push Dominic Smith and Jeff McNeil to the bench-slash-platoon-Slash-Axl. Remember when there were people who thought some random 60-game stretch of Dom Smith meant he was good? Haha, those people were almost as dumb as the people who drafted Cody Bellinger last year. Hey, wait, that's me! Jeff McNeil actually pulled the wool over our eyes in a full season, but he was never really good either. On a related note, the Mets cornered the market on Micks who hit weak grounders. Between McCann and McNeil, they hit about as hard as the IRA, if the Irish Republican Army was modeled after everything they read about IRAs on Charles Schwab. Any hoo! Canha should fit perfectly in with the Mets, because Mets' fans need a good sense of humor so Canha helps. Can't really be a laughingstock without a Starling ability to Canha. Canha's 20.5% strikeout rate with a .231 average is a little bit of a concern. Couple that with his .274 and solid speed paints a picture of a guy who makes weak contact. McCann, McNeil and now M.C. are gonna bloop other teams to death. Seriously, Canha's peripherals indicate some pretty weak contact, and backing that up was the 35th worst Hard Contact% in the league. His Launch Angle came down a little, which was prolly better for him, as it led to a few less weak fly balls, even if they're more like weak bloopers to the 2nd baseman. For 2022, I'll give Mark Canha projections of 73/21/64/.239/10 in 571 ABs. That was the longest Mark Canha breakdown ever, because it was really just a giant stall for me, before tackling Starling Marte. A 33-year-old who just matched his career high at 47 steals. That's not even taking into account the very real evil eye the universe gives to all players who sign with the Mets. Ugh. I promised myself that I wouldn't be an ageist anymore. I wouldn't write off players just because they're old, but I sorted by all the players who were 33 years old who stole 47 bags or more, and there were 21 seasons of them since 1914 with 13 players. Seven of those were Lou Brock and Rickey Henderson. Guess what I'm saying is, after much deliberation about not worrying about a player's age in regards to steals, I am still doing exactly that. Marte also had a .372 BABIP. It's too simplistic to say the Mets just got had. Not as simplistic as saying a guy is old and his BABIP was high, but do you see why I was stalling? In the end, here's the thing, there's so many players to choose from, that you don't have to be right or wrong on some guys, you can just ignore them, and that's what I think I'm gonna be doing with Starling Marte. As far as his lineup slot, I will say the Mets have more number twos than a public toilet. If I were the Mets manager, and the Mets had a manager, I'd start the lineup Marte, Canha, Lindor, Alonso, but where are you finding Nimmo a spot? Maybe a trade with Miami, since he's a fish at heart. For 2022, I'll give Starling Marte projections of 89/19/61/.277/32 in 534 ABs. Anyway, here’s what else I saw this offseason for 2022 fantasy baseball:
Bit of a trivia question off the top: who were the last two big-time Yankees prospects who weren't overrated. Aaron Judge is quick to mind. Who else? Our best bet is to check the trades for guys who actualized for other organizations. Let’s see. Stanton was traded for Starlin Castro, Jose Devers and Jorge Guzman, so . . . no hits there. Still a pretty good trade for the fish considering Stanton’s inability to stay on the field. But that doesn’t matter to our purpose here: harvesting fantasy value on the Yankees’ farm, where this organization is loaded. It’s possible nobody markets their prospects better than New York. Whenever you hear flowery language about a Deivi Garcia or Jasson Dominguez type, keep that in mind. This front office schools its people well on speaking only in glowing terms when it comes to their minor league system. If a prospect writer’s primary process is checking in with team sources, they’ll probably wind up overrating young Yankees. Part of this effect is born from having a huge, hungry fan base. Part of it comes down to marketing. Part of it is simply the Yankees having a lot of money to invest in player development and acquisition and doing exactly that. All the historical caveats about their prospects apply, but even after some system-trimming deadline maneuvers, they’ve got an objectively impressive group at the moment. 
And thus ends our 2022 fantasy baseball rookies series. Next up, sleepers. You can hardly wait! No, you! Hope you enjoyed our 2022 fantasy baseball rookies series. It was brought to you by me! And The Bachelorette. Kidding on the last part, but I'm obviously a huge Bachelorette fan now that one of our own was on the show. In case you missed it when I said something a month ago: I have the show DVR'd and haven't watched. From what I understand, there's not much to watch as Tehol gets three minutes of airtime across three weeks, then is booted. Shame, because a bunch of people trying to find fake love sounds great to me. It's what I do every year when I draft a fantasy team. Any hoo! There's a few different types of fantasy baseball rookies. My goal is to give you all the types you're going to encounter, except, let's be honest, most of them are high upside bingo-bangos, and high upside bingo-bangos might be a year away from being high upside bingo-bangos. Then there's just steady producers. Jeremy Pena might fit into both categories. How he could be a high upside bingo-bangos: Jeremy Pena just came off one of the hottest months of September in minor league baseball: 22/10/19/.287/5. That's in 30 games. He was coming off wrist surgery, but that doesn't seem to be an issue at all, right? Rhetorical! He hit three homers in one game, turned around and almost hit for the cycle in the next game. His 2020 was lost (with all minor leaguers), then he missed five months with the wrist, so it's here where the bingo-bangoes become hard to account for. Is Jeremy as good as his September or he's simply old for Triple-A and ripping it up? Here's Jeremy Pena's first and second homer during the three-homer game. Think about your takeaways, then I will give you mine: So, what can we expect from Jeremy Pena for 2022 fantasy baseball?
It didn’t end the way they would’ve liked, but the Red Sox had a wonderful season, channeling some Tampa Bay ways with the help of Chief Baseball Officer Chaim Bloom and employing smart management on the field with the help of Alex Cora. When the club signed Enrique Hernandez, few would have predicted a 4 (3.9) WAR season punctuated by a monster playoff run (.408/.423/.837 with 5 HR), but I feel pretty confident this won’t be the last time the current Boston braintrust generates All-Star outcomes from mid tier free agents. The scary part is they don’t have to. With a big payroll and stocked system, the Sox appear poised for a long contention cycle. 
I forgot I included Vidal Brujan in my top 100 2nd half rankings, and, honestly, that made me laugh a lot. Hey, he sucked me in like he was Myles of Straw. No shame in that, I'd do it again if I had the chance. At the backend of the top 100 for the 2nd half, you gotta go risky ishkabibble vs. safe whose-he-whatsies. Vidal Brujan was called up right before the break last year, so I figured we were about to see a prince and I was the Kingmaker. I wasn't even playing checkers, and still missed. C'est la vie, as Ty France says. It was kinda weird how the Rays played Brujan this year. Called him up out of seemingly nowhere, then they let him rot on the bench and demoted him almost as quickly as they promoted him. Though, this reminds me of what I said in my Shane Baz fantasy, the Rays have no problem promoting rookies, they just don't retain them when they have to pay them. So, what can we expect from Vidal Brujan for 2022 fantasy baseball?
It’s your favorite hour of the week!  The Not Not News is back with all the Billy Hurley jokes and Grey Albright cackles you can handle. This week, a man gives himself a tattoo on an airplane and passengers are outraged. Then a woman is held hostage by a villainous possum and half of America's kids think bacon is a vegetable. After you listen to the podcast, we'd love to hear any feedback you might have for us down in the comments! Here are this week's stories so you can follow along:
[brid autoplay="true" video="902541" player="13959" title="RZBL%20FB%202021%20BSH%20Week%2011" duration="134" description="undefined" uploaddate="2021-11-18" thumbnailurl="//cdn.brid.tv/live/partners/9233/thumb/902541_t_1637216963.png" contentUrl="//cdn.brid.tv/live/partners/9233/sd/902541.mp4"] Imagine sexy upside starters are a twirling jump rope, and I'm skipping right outside of the swinging jump rope, counting myself off before jumping in. Okay, the jump rope are the Marlins' sexy, upside rookie starters and I'm, well, me. It's so hard to know where to jump in on the Marlins' sexy, upside rookie starters. Do I cover Sixto Sanchez (again), Max Meyer, or Edward Cabrera? Not to mention, they have five starters in their rotation that I love -- Sandy Alcantara, Trevor Rogers, Pablo Lopez, Elieser Hernandez, and Jesus Luzardo. The Marlins are just stacked with starters. Before we get to Edward Cabrera and what he can do (or you can skip to the 2nd paragraph, but that is cheating), can Cabrera even get in this rotation? Yes. Long answer: Yeeeeeeeeeeeees. Sandy Alcantara is the only surefire starter. As said about 168 words ago, I love the Marlins starters, but "safe" they are not. Rogers was so overworked by the end of the year; Pablo, Elieser, Jesus and Sixto might be good for 800 IP or 80. Speaking of 80, it's how many innings Edward Cabrera threw last year because of elbow soreness. Um, cool? Well, Prospect Itch covered that, here's what he said, "Cabrera didn’t throw much in 2020 due to recurring elbow soreness, then opened this season in the same limbo. Unlike about 90 percent of these stories, Cabrera’s did not wind up with Tommy John surgery. Instead, the thickening 6’5” righty was hitting 100 mph by midseason and combining that heat with a have-a-seat changeup at 92, a tight slider at 87 and an average curveball at 83. His slider has generated the best results thus far in the big leagues, holding opposing hitters to a .167 slugging percentage in 100 pitches. He’s thrown it 23.5 percent of the time, preferring the fastball (36.9%) and change (24.6%), each of which has been hit hard (.758 xSLG and .824 xSLG, respectively). He’s certainly a sleeper target for 2022 redraft leagues, but his command will have to take a step forward, something I think is fair to bet on given the organization’s history and the player’s baseline athleticism. Unlike Grey, who is an out-of-shape loser." That's hurtful, man. So, what can we expect from Edward Cabrera for 2022 fantasy baseball?
These birds are in no rush, man. They’re just getting going on the international front, so even though we might pounce on players who sign for big deals, I’m skeptical of the infrastructure in place to ease those teenagers’ transitions to professional baseball in the states. I’m skeptical of the whole plan, to be honest, given the slow-roasting, historical-losing outcomes we’ve seen so far. If Baltimore can follow the path the Astros and Cubs laid out by being truly abysmal for a half-decade just before the dawn of a successful stretch, the fans will appreciate the end point, assuming any remain. The AL East piece suggests their hands were tied to some extent--that the only path was full-tank with no on-field investments in the pitching or hitting side. I dunno. It’s just tough for me to get super hyped about the big future all these guys might have when we’ve seen what it took to acquire them. 
[brid autoplay="true" video="902541" player="13959" title="RZBL%20FB%202021%20BSH%20Week%2011" duration="134" description="undefined" uploaddate="2021-11-18" thumbnailurl="//cdn.brid.tv/live/partners/9233/thumb/902541_t_1637216963.png" contentUrl="//cdn.brid.tv/live/partners/9233/sd/902541.mp4"] Since I'm focused mostly on 2022 fantasy baseball, and how guys can help us next year, whenever next year is, Roansy Contreras moved up on the radar, because the Pirates' puzzling moves at the end of the year to bring up their guys. It was almost like a showcase for the Rays. "So, do you like Roansy for a middle reliever? Right...Who do you want to send us? Garrett Whitlock for Roansy and Oneil Cruz? Okay, but it says here the Rays don't have Garrett Whitlock that he's on the Red Sox. The team media guide is wrong? Okay, that sounds fair then, we'll send you Roansy and Oneil for a player we're not sure you have on your team." Jokes aside, for the life of me, I can't understand why Roansy Contreras was called up for one day at the end of the year, then sent back down a day later, but maybe someone has a better idea than me. Either way, since the Pirates did that, it means the Pirates are at least considering Roansy Contreras for the 2022 Pirates' rotation, which puts him on our radar. So, what can we expect from Roansy Contreras for 2022 fantasy baseball?
There's likely a lot of factors that go into fantasy baseball prospects, but here's two I look at: 1. Ready and it's up to the club. 2. Not ready. Frank Voila! That's it! Well, maybe not it it, but it is close enough to it. That it is in the It Crowd. In the big broad, general sense. If the player is in the 2nd category, then I'm not going to cover them. It's why we have Prospectors Itch and Hobbs. They'll tell you the guys who will be ready, eventually. My job is to tell you the guys who are ready, then leave it up to the team on whether or not they're going to promote them. Triston Casas aka The House of Triston, as he's known to George RR Martin, is ready. Honestly, Triple-A is a way station, in general. If a guy is in Triple-A, he could be in the majors. There's no more "learning" for Triple-A guys. Maybe some are just not good enough for the majors, so they sit in Triple-A for years, but even those guys are Quad-A guys, not Triple-A guys. See, there's no such thing as Triple-A. You've been woke'd up. You're welcome. This doesn't mean the Red Sox will call up Triston Casas, just because he's in Triple-A. But they could at any time. So, what can we expect from Triston Casas for 2022 fantasy baseball? Psyche! Before we get to the rest of the post, just wanted to announce that we're doing an NFBC league. Originally, we were talking about starting an NFBC Draft Champions league (slow draft, you don't have to be at your computer) on Black Friday, but I forgot I had family in town for Thanksgiving, so I set the league up to draft starting the following Monday at noon EST. That's the Monday after Thanksgiving (11/29). It is a slow draft league; you don't need to be at your computer to draft. Yes, I said this already five sentences ago, so sue me! First person to sue gets Razzball, 2nd person gets Cougs, 3rd person to sue gets my car -- it needs oil! The league will be the Draft Champions format, $150 to join, and you can win $1000, or $350 to place, or $150 to show -- overall prize is $30,000, 2nd place is $7,500 etc. You can find the prizes at their site. The link for the league is here, NFBC LEAGUE. This 15-team league has no waivers and is Draft and Hold. This league already has quite a few people who have joined, because I opened it to our Patreon a few days ago. I'm going to start rolling out my rankings there soon too. Anyway, back to Triston Casas for 2022 fantasy baseball: