LOGIN

Please see our player page for Konnor Griffin to see projections for today, the next 7 days and rest of season as well as stats and gamelogs designed with the fantasy baseball player in mind.

*nudges the Fantasy Baseball Buy/Sell, and it doesn’t move* “Oh my God, the Fantasy Baseball Buy/Sell is dead!” Drowsily, the Fantasy Baseball Buy/Sell begins to wake on the couch, “I’m not dead, you idiot. I’m hungover. Could you please stop screaming?” “Woo hoo! The Fantasy Baseball Buy/Sell is alive!” Rubbing temples, sitting up and asking, […]

Please, blog, may I have some more?

Tigers SS Kevin McGonigle and Cardinals SS JJ Wetherholt got some good news this week: they’ll be breaking camp as big leaguers. The early frontrunners for rookie of the year forced the issue by walking more than they struck out in spring training. Each hit two homers and stole two bases. Left-handed hitters who are both listed at five-foot-nine, they may find themselves conversationally linked throughout their careers after sharing this spotlight. 

Please, blog, may I have some more?

Spring training lies to you. It always has. Batting averages spike, ERAs balloon, and every backfield breakout starts to feel like a prophecy. But every March also leaves breadcrumbs, real ones if you know where to look. Approach, bat speed, physicality, how a player carries himself against arms a level above where he’s lived. That stuff travels. This year, three rookie shortstops are on everybody’s minds and just how much they will be able to force the conversation. Konnor Griffin, Kevin McGonigle, and JJ Wetherholt didn’t treat camp like a tryout. They treated it like a preview, so let’s see what we can expect from this trio in 2026.

Please, blog, may I have some more?

Spring training chaos creates fantasy baseball opportunity, and in this episode of the Razzball Fantasy Baseball Podcast, we break down the most important position battles for 2026 and what they mean for your drafts and early-season strategy. Injuries and uncertainty could open the door for new contributors. Shaky springs are putting rotation spots in question. […]

Please, blog, may I have some more?

Angels SS Zach Neto 39.9

Neto might be paying a price for being on the Angels, and that’s not totally unwarranted given that runs and RBI might be hard to find. Still, he hit 26 homers and stole 26 bases while batting .257 in his age 24 season on a team with little lineup protection. He’s going after a trio of first basemen in Matt Olson, Rafael Devers, and Bryce Harper, and I totally understand that impulse to take the safest bats you can find. I just prefer the five-category contributions of a guy like Neto, who’s going almost ten spots higher than this in the NFBC: 30.37 since March 1 (121 drafts). 

Please, blog, may I have some more?