In a lot of ways, fantasy baseball roto leagues are antiquated beasts.
It's 2019. We know that batting averages, RBIs, and pitcher wins are terrible ways to evaluate which players are truly the best in the sport. Teams definitely aren't operating based on these numbers anymore.
That doesn't make it any less fun.
Only in a format this strange and beautiful could Billy Hamilton and his career almost-nice-but-not-actually-nice 70 wRC+ be a truly viable option. We know it's completely backward, but the intricacies that arise from it are absolutely entertaining.
As we get set for the upcoming season, let's embrace the madness and dive into some rankings for these spectacular devils. If you're playing in a points league, those rankings went up earlier this week and have already been tweaked a bit to account for recent news. The roto rankings will also be updated as we get deeper into spring training.
We'll go position-by-position here, assuming that it's a traditional five-by-five category roto league, starting with the position of utmost delight that is catcher.
Catcher
Rank | Player | Tier |
---|---|---|
1 | J.T. Realmuto | 1 |
2 | Gary Sanchez | 2 |
3 | Wilson Ramos | 3 |
4 | Yadier Molina | 3 |
5 | Yasmani Grandal | 3 |
6 | Willson Contreras | 3 |
7 | Buster Posey | 3 |
8 | Danny Jansen | 4 |
9 | Francisco Cervelli | 4 |
10 | Tucker Barnhart | 4 |
11 | Welington Castillo | 4 |
12 | Jonathan Lucroy | 4 |
13 | Robinson Chirinos | 5 |
14 | Omar Narvaez | 5 |
15 | Kurt Suzuki | 6 |
16 | Mike Zunino | 6 |
17 | Jorge Alfaro | 6 |
18 | Chris Iannetta | 7 |
19 | Austin Hedges | 7 |
20 | Francisco Mejia | 7 |
21 | Yan Gomes | 7 |
22 | Elias Diaz | 8 |
23 | John Hicks | 8 |
24 | Tyler Flowers | 8 |
Catcher sucks. There is no way to get around that. And normally, when a position sucks, you want to minimize investment in the position so that you're not taking an overall dud when you've got desirable assets at another position still on the board.
But at catcher, I'm willing to pay a bit in order to avoid the complete muck.
Part of my willingness to do so stems from the attractiveness of the catchers in the third tier of my rankings. Both Yadier Molina and Wilson Ramos are going outside the top 140 picks on ESPN, and that's not a terribly restrictive cost. I'm expecting to wind up having those two, specifically, on a bunch of my rosters this year.
The other reason I don't mind spending up is that the dropoff after Omar Narvaez is pretty steep. Kurt Suzuki has been a great hitter the past few years, but he and Yan Gomes will be sharing time with the Washington Nationals. Mike Zunino and Jorge Alfaro will single-handedly force you to punt batting average. It gets grim really quickly.
Even in a two-catcher league, I'd ideally like to live in that third tier, potentially snagging catchers on back-to-back picks. I'm not opposed to having someone like Narvaez being the second guy on my roster, but the blackhole of production that comes after him is scary enough for me to change the way I approach a draft.
First Base
Rank | Player | Tier |
---|---|---|
1 | Freddie Freeman | 1 |
2 | Paul Goldschmidt | 1 |
3 | Cody Bellinger | 2 |
4 | Anthony Rizzo | 2 |
5 | Matt Carpenter | 2 |
6 | Joey Votto | 2 |
7 | Jose Abreu | 2 |
8 | Matt Olson | 3 |
9 | Max Muncy | 3 |
10 | Jesus Aguilar | 3 |
11 | Miguel Cabrera | 4 |
12 | Edwin Encarnacion | 4 |
13 | Pete Alonso | 4 |
14 | Jurickson Profar | 4 |
15 | Justin Smoak | 4 |
16 | Joey Gallo | 5 |
17 | Jake Bauers | 5 |
18 | Ian Desmond | 5 |
19 | Carlos Santana | 5 |
20 | Eric Hosmer | 6 |
21 | Ryan Zimmerman | 6 |
22 | Yuli Gurriel | 6 |
23 | Josh Bell | 6 |
24 | Trey Mancini | 6 |
25 | Ryan McMahon | 7 |
26 | Marwin Gonzalez | 7 |
27 | Luke Voit | 7 |
28 | Yonder Alonso | 7 |
29 | Justin Bour | 8 |
30 | Greg Bird | 8 |
Given that this is Max Muncy's age-28 season, and he's had just 481 plate appearances of true success in the majors, it's likely hard to buy in. This is especially true in a roto league, where his 27.2% strikeout rate and heavy fly-ball tendencies are going to drag down his batting average. But even after accounting for those, he still seems like a solid value.
Muncy is currently going 159th overall on ESPN, making him the 16th-ranked first baseman. When you're picking a player that late, you're taking into account the fact that he'll likely contribute in just three categories. With Muncy's power being as big as it is, he seems on track to contribute in a major way to all three.
Muncy finished last year with a 47.4% hard-hit rate and 44.9% fly-ball rate, numbers that fully validate a lofty home run total. numberFire's projections peg him for 29 homers in 544 plate appearances, a rate you'd happily accept in that lineup at this price. Even with a lower batting average and a lack of steals, Muncy's worth targeting.
Second Base
Rank | Player | Tier |
---|---|---|
1 | Jose Altuve | 1 |
2 | Whit Merrifield | 2 |
3 | Javier Baez | 2 |
4 | Ozzie Albies | 3 |
5 | Travis Shaw | 3 |
6 | Daniel Murphy | 3 |
7 | Gleyber Torres | 3 |
8 | Jonathan Villar | 3 |
9 | Rougned Odor | 3 |
10 | Brian Dozier | 4 |
11 | Robinson Cano | 4 |
12 | Dee Gordon | 5 |
13 | Yoan Moncada | 5 |
14 | Cesar Hernandez | 5 |
15 | Jed Lowrie | 6 |
16 | Asdrubal Cabrera | 6 |
17 | Ketel Marte | 6 |
18 | Joey Wendle | 6 |
19 | Marwin Gonzalez | 6 |
20 | Lourdes Gurriel | 7 |
21 | Niko Goodrum | 7 |
22 | Jonathan Schoop | 7 |
23 | Starlin Castro | 7 |
24 | Jeff McNeil | 8 |
25 | Ian Kinsler | 8 |
26 | Kike Hernandez | 8 |
27 | Scooter Gennett | 8 |
28 | DJ LeMahieu | 8 |
29 | Adam Frazier | 8 |
30 | Nick Senzel | 9 |
Because the Milwaukee Brewers have a fairly deep bench, there's a chance Travis Shaw will lose some volume when left-handed pitchers are on the mound. He still seems to be a value at this position despite that.
Shaw made big strides as a true hitter last year, trimming his strikeout rate to 18.4% with a 13.3% walk rate. Those walks don't directly help you in roto leagues, but they do give him chances to score runs and ensure that he'll stick in the lineup for a talented club. We shouldn't ignore walks just because they don't provide an obvious and immediate lift.
Shaw made these plate-discipline gains while also upping his hard-hit rate to 39.8% with a 44.5% fly-ball rate. That lofty fly-ball rate will prevent him from ever having major upside in his batting average, but the power potential helps nullify those losses.
Even though Shaw's batted-ball data hit the tank against lefties, he did still manage an 18.0% strikeout rate and 12.0% walk rate without the platoon advantage. He wasn't a total scrub, which is another positive for his outlook. With Shaw coming off the board as the 11th-ranked second baseman on ESPN, we should feel good betting on another fine season.
Third Base
Rank | Player | Tier |
---|---|---|
1 | Jose Ramirez | 1 |
2 | Nolan Arenado | 2 |
3 | Alex Bregman | 2 |
4 | Javier Baez | 3 |
5 | Kris Bryant | 3 |
6 | Anthony Rendon | 4 |
7 | Eugenio Suarez | 4 |
8 | Matt Carpenter | 4 |
9 | Josh Donaldson | 5 |
10 | Travis Shaw | 5 |
11 | Vladimir Guerrero Jr. | 5 |
12 | Matt Chapman | 5 |
13 | Max Muncy | 5 |
14 | Miguel Andujar | 6 |
15 | Mike Moustakas | 6 |
16 | Justin Turner | 6 |
17 | Wil Myers | 6 |
18 | Jurickson Profar | 6 |
19 | Rafael Devers | 7 |
20 | Eduardo Escobar | 7 |
21 | Asdrubal Cabrera | 7 |
22 | Joey Wendle | 7 |
23 | Jeimer Candelario | 7 |
24 | Jung-ho Kang | 7 |
25 | Evan Longoria | 7 |
26 | Miguel Sano | 8 |
27 | Jake Lamb | 8 |
28 | Yuli Gurriel | 8 |
29 | Brian Anderson | 8 |
30 | Maikel Franco | 8 |
Given the nightmarish injury luck he had last year, it would seem a bit foolish to put Josh Donaldson 9th at a position that is fairly deep on talent. What Donaldson did when healthy, though, seems to show that he's still got it.
Donaldson did see his strikeout rate creep up to 24.7% last year, which is certainly concerning and a career-high mark. He helped cancel part of that out by boasting a 41.0% hard-hit rate and 35.1% fly-ball rate. Both those numbers -- and Donaldson's strikeout rate -- looked even better when he came back in September, stirring optimism that the old Donaldson was still there.
Now, Roster Resource projects that Donaldson will hit second for the Atlanta Braves, right between Ronald Acuna and Freddie Freeman. Situations don't get much sweeter than that. As long as Donaldson can duplicate what he did in September and hold down that spot in the order, he should be able to justify a decent investment on draft day.
Shortstop
Rank | Player | Tier |
---|---|---|
1 | Trea Turner | 1 |
2 | Francisco Lindor | 2 |
3 | Alex Bregman | 2 |
4 | Manny Machado | 2 |
5 | Trevor Story | 2 |
6 | Adalberto Mondesi | 2 |
7 | Javier Baez | 2 |
8 | Carlos Correa | 3 |
9 | Gleyber Torres | 3 |
10 | Jose Peraza | 3 |
11 | Jean Segura | 3 |
12 | Xander Bogaerts | 4 |
13 | Jurickson Profar | 4 |
14 | Corey Seager | 4 |
15 | Elvis Andrus | 5 |
16 | Jorge Polanco | 5 |
17 | Paul DeJong | 5 |
18 | Andrelton Simmons | 6 |
19 | Marcus Semien | 7 |
20 | Amed Rosario | 7 |
21 | Eduardo Escobar | 7 |
22 | Garrett Hampson | 7 |
23 | Asdrubal Cabrera | 7 |
24 | Willy Adames | 7 |
25 | Tim Anderson | 8 |
26 | Ketel Marte | 8 |
27 | Marwin Gonzalez | 8 |
28 | Lourdes Gurriel Jr. | 8 |
29 | Didi Gregorius | 9 |
30 | Chris Taylor | 9 |
The value on Adalberto Mondesi depends heavily on where you're drafting. He's coming off the board at 37th overall on CBS, 36th in March drafts for the National Fantasy Baseball Championship, 72nd on Yahoo, and all the way back in 123rd on ESPN. So, on which sites should we be comfortable taking him at his current cost?
Some of the fear on the lower-end sites around Mondesi likely revolves around his plate discipline. His 26.5% strikeout rate and 3.8% walk rate last year were fully not great, Bob, and they mean his value in on-base-percentage leagues will be lower.
The other fear is that he could be 2019's Jonathan Villar. Villar burst on the scene in 2016 and stole 62 bases, elevating himself into being a high-end draft pick the following year. Villar completely flopped, getting hurt in June and later benched. But there are some major differences between Villar's 2016 and Mondesi's 2018. Here's a look at their respective breakouts with UZR/150 referring to Ultimate Zone Rating to account for each player's defensive skills.
Season | Age | Strikeout Rate | Hard-Hit Rate | Fly-Ball Rate | UZR/150 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Villar in 2016 | 25 | 25.6% | 35.1% | 24.1% | -19.7 |
Mondesi in 2018 | 22 | 26.5% | 43.1% | 37.6% | 10.1 |
Yes, Villar had better plate discipline as his walk rate was also much higher than Mondesi's. But Mondesi was three years younger, had much better batted-ball numbers, and doesn't wield a concrete glove on defense. Villar's struggles and the Brewers' depth led to a benching, but Mondesi doesn't have that issue on a team that seems to have no interest in winning. The two situations couldn't be much different.
numberFire's projections tab Mondesi for 39 steals and 18 home runs this season. The only other player projected for at least 25 steals who is also projected to hit at least 18 home runs is Trea Turner. It's fine if you want to avoid Mondesi on CBS and NFBC due to his cost, but on Yahoo and ESPN, drafting this guy truly seems to be a no-brainer.
Outfield
Rank | Player | Tier |
---|---|---|
1 | Mike Trout | 1 |
2 | Mookie Betts | 1 |
3 | Bryce Harper | 2 |
4 | Christian Yelich | 2 |
5 | J.D. Martinez | 2 |
6 | Ronald Acuna | 2 |
7 | Charlie Blackmon | 2 |
8 | Aaron Judge | 2 |
9 | Giancarlo Stanton | 2 |
10 | Whit Merrifield | 2 |
11 | Cody Bellinger | 3 |
12 | Kris Bryant | 3 |
13 | Andrew Benintendi | 3 |
14 | Rhys Hoskins | 3 |
15 | Lorenzo Cain | 4 |
16 | Juan Soto | 4 |
17 | Tommy Pham | 4 |
18 | Starling Marte | 4 |
19 | George Springer | 4 |
20 | Yasiel Puig | 5 |
21 | David Dahl | 5 |
22 | Eddie Rosario | 5 |
23 | Mitch Haniger | 5 |
24 | A.J. Pollock | 5 |
25 | Marcell Ozuna | 5 |
26 | Michael Conforto | 6 |
27 | Eloy Jimenez | 6 |
28 | Justin Upton | 6 |
29 | Andrew McCutchen | 6 |
30 | Michael Brantley | 6 |
31 | Mallex Smith | 6 |
32 | Victor Robles | 7 |
33 | Aaron Hicks | 7 |
34 | Nicholas Castellanos | 7 |
35 | Byron Buxton | 7 |
36 | Wil Myers | 8 |
37 | Joey Gallo | 8 |
38 | David Peralta | 8 |
39 | Ian Desmond | 8 |
40 | Dee Gordon | 8 |
41 | Stephen Piscotty | 8 |
42 | Brandon Nimmo | 8 |
43 | Jake Bauers | 9 |
44 | Ender Inciarte | 9 |
45 | Nomar Mazara | 9 |
46 | Ramon Laureano | 9 |
47 | Adam Eaton | 9 |
48 | Austin Meadows | 9 |
49 | Max Kepler | 9 |
50 | Jackie Bradley Jr. | 10 |
51 | Corey Dickerson | 10 |
52 | Marwin Gonalez | 10 |
53 | Kyle Schwarber | 10 |
54 | Hunter Renfroe | 10 |
55 | Randal Grichuk | 10 |
56 | Jesse Winker | 10 |
57 | Billy Hamilton | 11 |
58 | Cedric Mullins | 11 |
59 | Kevin Kiermaier | 11 |
60 | Nick Markakis | 11 |
61 | Harrison Bader | 11 |
62 | Domingo Santana | 11 |
63 | Trey Mancini | 12 |
64 | Ryan Braun | 12 |
65 | Odubel Herrera | 12 |
66 | Steven Souza Jr. | 12 |
67 | Christin Stewart | 12 |
68 | Chris Taylor | 12 |
69 | Manuel Margot | 12 |
70 | Jose Martinez | 12 |
71 | Shin-Soo Choo | 13 |
72 | Jay Bruce | 13 |
73 | Matt Kemp | 13 |
74 | Kyle Tucker | 13 |
75 | Kevin Pillar | 13 |
Sticking with the topic of hitters who broke out and then took a step back, Tommy Pham's 2018 was a mixed bag. He added 40 plate appearances over what he got in 2017, but he regressed in every category except runs scored. A change of scenery could allow him to be a solid asset in 2019.
The obvious benefit of joining the Tampa Bay Rays at least year's trade deadline is that Pham's playing time should be more secure with an extra position player in the lineup each day in the American League. That's a plus for a guy who was getting squeezed a bit for starts during his stretch run in St. Louis.
Additionally, Pham -- potentially due to his eye condition -- has always struggled during day games, striking out 27.0% of the time compared to a 24.7% strikeout rate during night games. The sun will play less of a factor with his home games being indoors, and in a small sample of 174 games in domes, Pham has a .306/.416/.528 triple slash. After joining the Rays in August, Pham had a 14.4% walk rate with a 51.0% hard-hit rate, allowing him to post some bonkers numbers.
Back in 2017, Pham hit 23 homers and stole 25 bases, which would be great numbers for fantasy. The optimism around his new home means we should be willing to take a shot on him once we get beyond the first 60 or so picks.
Utility
Rank | Player | Tier |
---|---|---|
1 | Khris Davis | 1 |
2 | Nelson Cruz | 1 |
3 | Shohei Ohtani | 2 |
4 | Ji-Man Choi | 3 |
5 | Mark Trumbo | 4 |
6 | Kendrys Morales | 4 |
As mentioned in the points league rankings, the lack of a position is allowing Khris Davis and Nelson Cruz to be massive bargains.
On ESPN, Davis is going 45th overall and 31st among hitters while Cruz is 78th and 53rd, respectively. numberFire projects Davis to tie for the league lead in homers with 42, and Cruz's projected 35 put him in a tie for eighth. Both guys also contribute in other categories and won't pull a Joey Gallo on your batting average, so there's really no reason not to draft them. Just figure out where they're going on the site you're playing on and plan on taking them slightly before your draft gets to that point.
Starting Pitcher
Rank | Player | Tier |
---|---|---|
1 | Chris Sale | 1 |
2 | Max Scherzer | 1 |
3 | Justin Verlander | 1 |
4 | Gerrit Cole | 1 |
5 | Jacob deGrom | 1 |
6 | Carlos Carrasco | 2 |
7 | Aaron Nola | 2 |
8 | Noah Syndergaard | 2 |
9 | Trevor Bauer | 2 |
10 | Walker Buehler | 2 |
11 | Corey Kluber | 2 |
12 | Blake Snell | 2 |
13 | James Paxton | 3 |
14 | Patrick Corbin | 3 |
15 | Luis Severino | 3 |
16 | Clayton Kershaw | 4 |
17 | Stephen Strasburg | 4 |
18 | Mike Clevinger | 4 |
19 | German Marquez | 4 |
20 | Jack Flaherty | 4 |
21 | Jameson Taillon | 4 |
22 | Jose Berrios | 5 |
23 | Zack Greinke | 5 |
24 | Zack Wheeler | 5 |
25 | Masahiro Tanaka | 5 |
26 | Miles Mikolas | 5 |
27 | Charlie Morton | 5 |
28 | Rick Porcello | 5 |
29 | David Price | 5 |
30 | Cole Hamels | 5 |
31 | Luis Castillo | 6 |
32 | Chris Archer | 6 |
33 | J.A. Happ | 6 |
34 | Robbie Ray | 6 |
35 | Yu Darvish | 6 |
36 | Nick Pivetta | 6 |
37 | Kenta Maeda | 6 |
38 | Ross Stripling | 7 |
39 | Madison Bumgarner | 7 |
40 | Tyler Glasnow | 7 |
41 | Dallas Keuchel | 7 |
42 | Kyle Hendricks | 8 |
43 | Rich Hill | 8 |
44 | Jake Arrieta | 8 |
45 | Kyle Gibson | 8 |
46 | Joe Musgrove | 8 |
47 | Eduardo Rodriguez | 8 |
48 | Hyun-jin Ryu | 9 |
49 | Alex Wood | 9 |
50 | Joey Lucchesi | 9 |
51 | Andrew Heaney | 9 |
52 | Mike Foltynewicz | 9 |
53 | Tyler Skaggs | 9 |
54 | Jose Quintana | 9 |
55 | Marco Gonzales | 10 |
56 | Nathan Eovaldi | 10 |
57 | Shane Bieber | 10 |
58 | Jon Lester | 10 |
59 | Zack Godley | 10 |
60 | Yusei Kikuchi | 10 |
61 | Alex Reyes | 10 |
62 | Carlos Martinez | 11 |
63 | Matthew Boyd | 11 |
64 | Carlos Rodon | 11 |
65 | Kevin Gausman | 11 |
66 | Jimmy Nelson | 11 |
67 | Touki Toussaint | 11 |
68 | Reynaldo Lopez | 12 |
69 | Michael Wacha | 12 |
70 | Chris Paddack | 12 |
71 | Mike Fiers | 12 |
72 | Jon Gray | 12 |
73 | Forrest Whitley | 12 |
74 | Steven Matz | 12 |
75 | Julio Urias | 12 |
On ESPN, Carlos Carrasco is currently going 12th among starting pitchers, putting him third among Cleveland Indians starters. Given how well he performed last year, that seems to be a bit of a bargain.
Carrasco's numbers for the full season were elite as he had a 3.03 skill-interactive ERA (SIERA) with a 29.5% strikeout rate and 5.5% walk rate. But he reached a whole new level of nastiness after returning from an injury in July.
From July 6th on, Carrasco started 15 games, roughly half a season of sample. In that span, he upped his strikeout rate to 33.0%, a number fully validated by his 17.2% swinging-strike rate. He did all of this while still keeping his ground-ball rate well above average at 51.4%, meaning Carrasco really was the full package. He pitched at least six innings in 11 of those 15 starts, so volume wasn't an issue, either.
If Carrasco were to do that for a full season, he'd be in that top tier at pitcher. Because we haven't seen him do it over that long of a sample yet, we've got to keep him a notch below the others. But given that 15 games is a pretty sizable mark, he's definitely someone we'll want to target once the top-end aces are off the board.
Relief Pitcher
Rank | Player | Tier |
---|---|---|
1 | Edwin Diaz | 1 |
2 | Roberto Osuna | 2 |
3 | Kenley Jansen | 2 |
4 | Aroldis Chapman | 2 |
5 | Craig Kimbrel | 2 |
6 | Josh Hader | 3 |
7 | Sean Doolittle | 3 |
8 | Blake Treinen | 3 |
9 | Kirby Yates | 3 |
10 | Brad Hand | 3 |
11 | Felipe Vazquez | 3 |
12 | Jose Leclerc | 4 |
13 | Will Smith | 4 |
14 | Cody Allen | 4 |
15 | Ken Giles | 4 |
16 | Raisel Iglesias | 4 |
17 | Jose Alvarado | 4 |
18 | Wade Davis | 4 |
19 | Matt Barnes | 4 |
20 | David Robertson | 5 |
21 | Jordan Hicks | 5 |
22 | Seranthony Dominguez | 5 |
23 | Collin McHugh | 5 |
24 | Brad Peacock | 5 |
25 | Trevor May | 5 |
26 | A.J. Minter | 6 |
27 | Adam Ottavino | 6 |
28 | Andrew Miller | 6 |
29 | Corey Knebel | 6 |
30 | Ryan Brasier | 6 |
31 | Alex Colome | 6 |
32 | Pedro Strop | 7 |
33 | Jeremy Jeffress | 7 |
34 | Dellin Betances | 7 |
35 | Kelvin Herrera | 7 |
36 | Mychal Givens | 7 |
37 | Shane Greene | 7 |
38 | Arodys Vizcaino | 7 |
39 | Drew Steckenrider | 7 |
40 | Brandon Morrow | 8 |
41 | Craig Stammen | 8 |
42 | Archie Bradley | 8 |
43 | Blake Parker | 8 |
44 | Jose Castillo | 8 |
45 | Wily Peralta | 9 |
If you play in a roto league where there's a limit on the number of innings pitched your staff can accumulate, you need Josh Hader on your roster.
Assuming everyone in the league uses the full allotment of innings, the strikeout category will be won by the person who gets the most strikeouts per inning. If one of your guys has a 46.7% strikeout rate over 81 1/3 innings -- what Hader did in 2018 -- then you'll be white-knuckling all the juice that orange has to provide.
Hader isn't going to get a ton of saves due to the way he's used, but he'll help you in strikeouts, ERA, and WHIP. He'll also pitch in with a couple of wins because he enters in the highest-leverage situations. Even while not fitting the traditional mold for a fantasy reliever, Hader's someone we should actively seek out in roto leagues.
If you do wind up with Hader and need to scramble for saves later, Matt Barnes could be your guy. The Boston Red Sox have yet to name a closer, but Barnes' performance last year should make him the front-runner. Over 61 2/3 innings, Barnes had a 36.2% strikeout rate with a 2.78 SIERA and a 53.0% ground-ball rate. That's not quite on Craig Kimbrel's level, but it'll get the job done. With the other competitor for the closer's role -- Ryan Brasier -- dealing with a toe issue, Barnes' chances of snagging the role are going up.
Finally, the other late-round guy you should be eyeing for saves is Trevor May. The Minnesota Twins may not have a traditional closer this year, but May figures to be pitching in high-leverage spots to get saves and wins. He came back from Tommy John surgery last year to post a 35.0% strikeout rate, 4.9% walk rate, and 15.4% swinging-strike rate over 25 1/3 innings. As the 34th reliever off the board on ESPN, May's worth the gamble even in an ambiguous situation.