Felipe Rivero, Archie Bradley, Joe Smith, David Phelps and Will Harris deserve your attention.
Hunter Pence, Jacob Faria and Sean Newcomb say hello to active major-league duty and good-bye to the List. A.J. Reed also bids adios, but it’s because there’s seemingly no way for him to reach the majors right now.
Andrelton Simmons has been getting results—and showing other signs—that he’s having a career season in fantasy.
Eric Young is getting old, but he remains fast—so he’s worth your time.
Koda Glover fumbles an opportunity, but it’s not time for his owners to panic until the Nats get heavy into trade talks for a new closer. Sean Doolittle soon will be lurking again in the Oakland bullpen. Cam Bedrosian is back with the Angels, but does that mean Bud Norris loses his place in line?
Eric Young Jr. will haunt your dreams after Mike’s mini-biography.
Steven Souza has been on the more productive outfielders in 2017, but will this trend continue—or should owners move him while his value is at its highest?
Yoan Moncada and Julio Urias lead the way—but for how much longer?
Clayton Kershaw, Max Scherzer and Chris Sale are the elites among the five-star pitchers.
Only Kenley Jansen, Craig Kimbrel and Wade Davis are the elite—the best of the best. But David Robertson is pretty good, too, doggone it.
Carlos Martinez, Max Scherzer, Chris Archer and Justin Verlander (yes, even him)—your table is ready.
Kris Bryant and Nolan Arenado lead the way as expected, even if they haven’t produced quite as much as hoped. Joey Gallo continues to crank home runs despite warning signs, and Nick Castellanos owners wait patiently by the box score for signs of a big rebound.
Manny Machado has too much of a track record to be dropped from the five stars—even if he’s not hitting like an elite SS.
J.D. Martinez got off to a late start, but is traveling five star from here to 162. Mike Trout, out for a while, must make more pedestrian accomodations.
Jose Altuve is as elite as they come—at any position.