X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Daily Stats & Leaders
All Pitcher Matchups
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

Are You For Real? Surprising Fantasy Baseball Pitcher Starts From Griffin Canning, Landen Roupp, Luis Ortiz

Luis L. Ortiz - Fantasy Baseball Rankings, Draft Sleepers, Waiver Wire Pickups

Elliott looks at pitchers with surprising starts recently. These SPs could emerge as fantasy baseball waiver wire targets for Week 4 in 2025, or just mirages.

Welcome back to the "Are You For Real?" series as we dive into Week 4 of the 2025 fantasy baseball season. For those who are not familiar, this is a weekly column where we take a look at starting pitchers who had surprisingly good starts over the past week and put them under the microscope to determine whether they're legitimate or just smoke and mirrors.

We've got three right-handers to look at this week. First, we'll check out the latest experiment from the Mets' pitching lab in Griffin Canning, who dominated the Cardinals on Thursday. Then, we'll deep dive into Landen Roupp's awesome start against the Angels this weekend. We'll finish it out by looking at Luis L. Ortiz's recent hot stretch.

Roster percentages are taken from Yahoo! and are accurate as of April 21.

Be sure to check all of our fantasy baseball lineup tools and resources:

 

Griffin Canning, New York Mets

7% Rostered

2025 Stats (prior to this start): 15 IP, 4.20 ERA, 4.63 FIP, 7.7% K-BB%

4/17 vs. STL: 6 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 8 K

Canning turned in his best start of the young season on Thursday, holding St. Louis to just one run over six innings while striking out eight. Canning had some offseason buzz as one of the latest reclamation projects to go through the Mets' pitching lab. Did he come out better for it, or can(ning) we ignore Griffin?

Originally a second-round pick by the Angels back in 2017, Canning had some prospect pedigree as he advanced through the Angels’ system. He was viewed as someone who could be a mid-rotation starter with his deep arsenal. Canning uses a six-pitch mix consisting of a four-seam fastball, slider, changeup, cutter, curveball, and sinker.

It may seem like a lot of pitches, but Canning has primarily relied on three of them this season, which are the four-seamer, slider, and changeup. All three were on display against St. Louis, and Canning has thrown the three pitches a combined 94.5 percent of the time.

The most significant change for Canning in 2025 is increased slider usage. He threw his slider 24 percent of the time last season, but he’s used it 36.5 percent of the time thus far in 2025. An 87.2 mph offering, the slider boasts some impressive measurements, including a 6.2-inch vertical drop above the league average.

Canning also gained four inches of drop with the pitch compared to last season. Here’s an example of the pitch from this start.

That’s some filthy drop, and Canning has fooled batters often with the pitch this season. He earned six of his 16 whiffs with the slider on Thursday, good for a 46 percent whiff rate. Overall, he has a 34.2 percent whiff rate with the pitch this season, along with a monster 44.6 percent chase rate. Canning’s slider has the makings of a legitimate strikeout pitch, and he should be able to maintain his current 23.9 percent strikeout rate.

The slider isn’t the only changed pitch for Canning. His fastball looks to be revamped as well. Canning is throwing with the same velocity at 93.4 mph, but he’s gained two inches of horizontal movement with his fastball this season compared to last year. Let’s compare his four-seam fastball shape from 2024 to 2025.

2024:

2025:

He has a rather average shape in 2024, but in 2025, we can see the impact of his increased horizontal break. It’s having a profound impact on batted balls against his four-seam fastball as well. Batters have a 25.5 percent ground-ball rate off Canning’s four-seam fastball all time, but they have a 60 percent ground-ball rate this season.

Opponents have really struggled against Canning’s fastball overall as well, hitting just .111 with a .111 SLG and .184 wOBA. The expected stats suggest that Canning has earned these results as well, with a .130 xBA, .176 xSLG, and .213 xwOBA against.

I don’t expect the .200 BABIP against or the 0 percent line drive rate against to hold, but Canning’s fastball looks new and improved for 2025, and he should get better results than he’s had in the past.

Canning rounds out his repertoire with an 88.7 mph changeup, which he’s used 23.1 percent of the time this season. He only threw it 18 percent of the time against St. Louis and earned three of his 16 whiffs with the pitch, good for a 30 percent whiff rate. Canning’s changeup doesn’t measure out as impressively as his previously discussed pitches, but he has gained two inches of drop with it this season.

Batters have handled it well enough, hitting .273 with a .409 SLG and .346 wOBA. He also has a .302 xBA and .367 xwOBA against, along with a 94.6 mph average exit velocity against the pitch. He’s gotten better results with the pitch over the course of his career, so perhaps Canning can even things out, but as it stands, the changeup seems a level behind the slider and four-seam fastball.e He

Canning does have three other pitches, the curveball, sinker, and cutter, but he’s thrown each pitch under 2.5 percent of the time this season. Perhaps this is part of the Mets' new approach. After all, these pitches haven’t had the best results in the major leagues.

Batters have a .253 AVG and .494 SLG off Canning’s curveball all time. They’re also hitting .364 against his sinker all time. Perhaps by simplifying Canning’s arsenal, the Mets can extract the value we know exists in this right arm.

Verdict:

The Mets have had great success with reclamation projects over the past few years, and Canning could be their newest find. He’s displayed increased movement on his slider, which could lead to more whiffs and strikeouts with the pitch. He’s also improved the movement on his four-seam fastball and is inducing more favorable contact as a result.

His changeup gives him a solid third pitch, if unremarkable. Canning seems to have pared down his arsenal to rely heavily on his three best pitches, the slider, four-seamer, and changeup. Whether this works for him long term remains to be seen, but this is a step in the right direction, and Canning is an intriguing waiver wire add as a result.

He’s worth adding in 12-team leagues or deeper.

 

Landen Roupp, San Francisco Giants

28% Rostered

2025 Stats (prior to this start): 15 IP, 4.80 ERA, 2.62 FIP, 19.4% K-BB%

4/19 @ LAA: 7 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 1 BB, 9 K

Roupp was fantastic on Saturday, fanning nine Angels en route to his second consecutive victory. Roupp has been a strikeout machine, posting at least eight strikeouts in three of his first four starts and putting up an impressive 11.86 K/9. Pitchers with strikeout upside like this are always interesting, but can Roupp sustain this performance?

Originally a 12th-round pick out of UNC-Wilmington, Roupp wasn’t viewed as much of a prospect coming up through San Francisco’s system. He was ranked as the Giants' 18th-best prospect by Fangraphs in 2024 at the age of 25, with Roupp being viewed as a likely reliever going forward.

Roupp works with a four-pitch mix consisting of a curveball, sinker, changeup, and cutter. He leans heavily on the curveball and sinker, throwing the pitches a combined 89 percent of the time in this start and 80.4 percent of the time on the year.

Roupp’s most-used pitch is his curveball, which he threw 45 percent of the time against the Angels. A 77.1 mph offering, Roupp’s curveball is best characterized by its extreme horizontal movement and high spin rate. He averages 3029 RPM with the pitch, and his curveball moves 6.6 inches above the league average.

Have a look at his curveball shape.

And have a look at his curveball in action in this start.

Not easy to make Mike Trout look like that (though he did serve up two home runs to Trout later), and Roupp was racking up the whiffs on his curveball all night. He notched 12 of his 18 whiffs with his curveball on Saturday. Batters are really struggling against this pitch, hitting just .115 with a .269 SLG and .202 wOBA against it.

The expected stats suggest that Roupp has also earned these results, with a .135 xBA, .241 xSLG, and .199 xwOBA. He also has a monster 55.6 percent whiff rate and 39.8 percent chase rate with the pitch. There’s a lot to like about Roupp’s curveball. While I don’t expect Roupp to maintain a 31.2 percent strikeout rate, his curveball has the makings of a dominant strikeout offering.

Then there’s Roupp’s sinker, which he threw 44 percent of the time against the Angels. A 93.3 mph offering, Roupp’s sinker has some exceptional movement as well. Let’s have a look at his movement profile again.

The sinker does sink, and batters would likely swing over the pitch, driving it into the ground. Unfortunately, that hasn’t happened for Roupp too often this season. His sinker has been crushed for a .417 AVG, .500 SLG, and .445 wOBA against.

Those numbers are bad, but the expected stats suggest that Roupp has gotten unlucky results with his sinker. He has a .253 xBA, .305 xSLG, and .308 xwOBA with his sinker this season, numbers more in line with last year’s results.

The .429 BABIP against his sinker should drop closer to .300, giving him better outcomes. We might also expect more groundballs from Roupp going forward, as he had a two-degree launch angle and a 60.7 percent ground-ball rate against his sinker last season, but a 12-degree average launch angle and 51.9 percent ground-ball rate against it this season.

He’s been a good ground-ball pitcher throughout the minors, so it’d be reasonable to expect the ground-ball rate to rise on his sinker and for him to get better results overall. It’s not as sexy as his curveball, but it’s a solid offering.

Roupp rounds out his arsenal with a changeup and cutter, though the changeup is his true third pitch, and he throws it about 14 percent of the time. An 87.9 mph offering, Roupp’s changeup does have exceptional vertical movement and has earned good strikeout numbers in the past. He only had two whiffs with it in this start, but he only threw it eight times total and had a 50 percent whiff rate.

Overall, Roupp has a 37.5 percent whiff rate and a 38.1 percent chase rate with the pitch this season.

Like the sinker, Roupp has had some poor results, but they seem like bad luck rather than a lack of skill. Batters are hitting .375 against Roupp’s changeup with a .500 SLG and .417 wOBA, but they have a .215 xBA, .316 xSLG, and .282 xwOBA. Now, keep in mind that we’re still dealing with a small sample size, but the numbers suggest that Roupp can perform better over time. There’s just no way he carries a .500 BABIP against his changeup all season.

Roupp’s changeup again isn’t as sexy as his curveball, but it’s a good third pitch to solidify a major league repertoire.

Verdict:

Roupp has been racking up the strikeouts thanks to a deadly curveball-sinker combo. His curveball has both impressive measurables and results, and it appears to be a bona fide strikeout pitch. With this pitch alone, Roupp could carve out a career in the bullpen.

He does have a full starter’s arsenal, however, with a solid sinker and a changeup he can wield against hitters from both sides of the plate. Don’t expect him to maintain a 31.2 percent strikeout rate, but Roupp should be a plus strikeout pitcher. He should also get better results once his .358 BABIP against and 15 percent HR/FB ratio normalize towards league average.

Roupp is a must-add in 12-team leagues or deeper; there’s a lot of upside here.

 

Luis L. Ortiz, Cleveland Guardians

14% Rostered

2024 Stats (prior to this start): 16.1 IP, 6.06 ERA, 4.69 FIP, 12.7% K-BB%

4/18 @ PIT: 5 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 8 K

Ortiz has been a strikeout machine lately, racking up 18 strikeouts over his last two starts, spanning 10 2/3 innings. He has an elevated 24.7 percent strikeout rate on the year and has put together three straight solid outings after being clobbered for seven runs in his first appearance. Is Ortiz turning a corner, or just taking advantage of weak opponents?

Initially signed by the Pirates as an international free agent, this was a revenge game for Ortiz, as he was traded from Pittsburgh to Cleveland this past offseason. Ortiz works with a five-pitch mix consisting of a four-seam fastball, slider, cutter, changeup, and sinker.

He mixes in all five pitches with some regularity, throwing each pitch at least nine percent of the time. He likes to lean mostly on the four-seamer, slider, and cutter, however, throwing each pitch at least 20 percent of the time this season.

Ortiz’s most-used pitch in this start was his four-seam fastball, which he threw 33 percent of the time and earned three of his 14 whiffs with the pitch. A 96.1 mph offering, Ortiz’s velocity was slightly up in this outing at 96.8 mph.

Ortiz’s four-seam fastball is best characterized by plus horizontal break and below-average vertical drop. He has above-average velocity, but average spin at 2274 RPM. For the most part, batters have hit well against the pitch.

Opponents are hitting .276 with a .552 SLG and .404 wOBA off Ortiz’s four-seamer this season, although the .247 xBA, .475 xSLG, and .360 xwOBA suggest that Ortiz has been a little unlucky with his four-seamer. Even so, the expected stats aren’t exactly blowing us away, and Ortiz could be susceptible to power.

He managed to surrender 1.1 HR/9 while pitching half his games in pitcher-friendly PNC Park during his tenure with the Pirates. Ortiz has also given up four home runs in his last three starts despite having a 3.24 ERA over that stretch.

Ortiz has fly-ball tendencies with a 16-degree average launch angle and a 94.9 mph average exit velocity against his fastball this season. He does have a solid 33.9 percent whiff rate with the pitch, but I wouldn’t expect him to maintain that throughout the season.

Ortiz had a 20.9 percent whiff rate with his four-seam last year and a 15.2 percent whiff rate with it the year before. It’s just not a strikeout pitch. Ortiz managed to get eight whiffs with it in his 10-strikeout performance against Kansas City on April 12, but that result seems fluky compared to his past performance and the pitch's measurables.

Ortiz’s best strikeout pitch is probably his slider, which he threw 27 percent of the time against Pittsburgh. He also earned seven of his 14 whiffs with the pitch on Friday, good for a 39 percent whiff rate. Ortiz’s slider has slightly above-average movement and average spin at 2,378 RPM.

Here’s an example from this start.

Pretty good pitch, and Ortiz isn’t afraid to use it against left-handed hitters either. Still, batters have handled the pitch relatively well this season. Opponents are hitting .269 with a .538 SLG and .359 wOBA against. Like with his four-seamer, the expected stats suggest that Ortiz has been a little unlucky, but the expected stats still aren’t great.

He has a .243 xBA, .490 xSLG, and .323 xwOBA against his slider this season. He does have an impressive 20.2 percent swinging-strike rate and a 47.6 percent chase rate with the pitch this season, but I’m not sure I expect those numbers to hold either.

He has a 15.4 percent swinging-strike rate and a 33.6 percent chase rate with his slider all time. He's not doing anything differently to suggest that these leaps are sustainable.

Ortiz also used his cutter 22 percent of the time in this start. A 90.9 mph offering, the cutter has painfully average movement and spin. Again, opponents have hit the pitch well with a .300 AVG, .400 SLG, and .352 wOBA against.

The expected stats do not suggest that Ortiz has been unlucky either, as he has a .295 xBA, .352 xSLG, and .331 xwOBA against this pitch. The cutter looks like a nice change of pace between the fastball and slider combo, but ultimately, I'm not impressed by this pitch.

The one thing Ortiz does well with the pitch is induce infield fly-balls, as he has a 28.6 percent infield fly-ball rate with his cutter all time. That’s not a good enough skill to trust him in my fantasy lineup. His last two starts came against two bottom-four offenses against right-handed pitchers, and I can’t trust him against anyone more formidable.

Verdict:

Ortiz has done a great job taking advantage of weak opposition, but that’s all that this recent hot stretch seems to be. The Royals have a .258 wOBA against right-handed pitching, worst in the league, while the Pirates are barely better at .280.

Ortiz has plus velocity and movement with his four-seamer, but not enough to think his 33.9 percent whiff rate is sustainable. His slider and cutter are both rather average pitches, and I wouldn’t expect Ortiz to maintain the gaudy strikeout numbers that we’ve seen.

Ortiz has proven himself good enough to be streamable against weak opponents, but I wouldn’t trust him against even an average offense.



Download Our Free News & Alerts Mobile App

Like what you see? Download our updated fantasy baseball app for iPhone and Android with 24x7 player news, injury alerts, sleepers, prospects & more. All free!



More Fantasy Baseball Advice




POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Daily Stats & Leaders
All Pitcher Matchups
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Atlanta Braves

Braves Hire Walt Weiss as Their Next Manager
Kris Bubic

Cleared to Begin a Throwing Program
Brandon Woodruff

Declines Mutual Option for 2026
Freddy Peralta

Brewers Exercise 2026 Option on Freddy Peralta
Lucas Giolito

Declines his 2026 Player Option
Daniel Gafford

to be Limited on Monday
Jabari Smith Jr.

Sidelined on Monday Night
Josh Hart

Available to Play on Monday
Walker Kessler

Out Again on Monday Night
Khris Middleton

Unavailable on Monday
Kyler Murray

Officially Inactive on Monday Night
Johnny Furphy

Ready to Go on Monday
RayJ Dennis

Cleared for Monday
Giannis Antetokounmpo

Available on Monday
Dylan Harper

to "Miss Multiple Weeks"
J.J. Spaun

Finishes Sixth at Procore Championship
PGA

Matti Schmid Finishes Tied for 46th at Baycurrent Classic
Keith Mitchell

Finishes Tied for 10th at Baycurrent Classic
Si Woo Kim

Finishes Tied for 21st at Genesis Championship
Mackenzie Hughes

Misses The Cut at Sanderson Farms Championship
Max Greyserman

Finishes Second at Baycurrent Classic
Austin Eckroat

Finishes Tied for 56th at Baycurrent Classic
Luke Clanton

Finishes Tied for 56th at Bank of Utah Championship
Brandon Miller

Out At Least Two More Weeks
Morgan Barron

Out Week-to-Week
Terry McLaurin

Commanders Don't Think Terry McLaurin Will Play in Week 10
Jayden Daniels

to be "Out for a While" With Dislocated Elbow
Adam Lowry

Ready for Season Debut Tuesday
Pierre-Luc Dubois

to Miss "Extended Period of Time"
Omarion Hampton

Not Expected to Return to Practice Until After Week 12 Bye
Robert Thomas

Set to Return Monday
Quinn Hughes

Available Monday
Justin Brazeau

Remains Out Monday
Norman Powell

Upgraded To Questionable For Matchup With Clippers
William Nylander

Rejoins Maple Leafs Lineup Monday
Austin Reaves

Sidelined On Monday
Luka Dončić

Luka Doncic Sitting Out On Monday
Josh Hart

Questionable Against Wizards
Mitchell Robinson

to Miss Monday's Matchup for Rest
Zach LaVine

to Play Monday Despite Questionable Tag
Dennis Schröder

Dennis Schroder Available for Kings on Monday Night
Zach Edey

Assigned to G-League, Expected Back Soon
Keaton Wallace

Practices, Tuesday's Status Remains Uncertain
Pete Alonso

Officially Opts Out of his Contract With Mets
Alex Bregman

Opts Out of his Contract With Boston
Edwin Díaz

Edwin Diaz on the Open Market This Winter
Cody Bellinger

Becomes Free Agent After Opting Out
Robert Suarez

Opts Out, Becomes Free Agent
Kyle Larson

Wins His Second NASCAR Cup Series Championship at Phoenix
Ryan Blaney

Concludes the 2025 Season with A Win at Phoenix
William Byron

Strong Championship Effort Ends With Late-Race Flat-Tire Crash
Quinshon Judkins

Browns Optimistic Quinshon Judkins Can Play in Week 10
Andrew Nembhard

Ruled Out Again on Monday
T.J. McConnell

Set to Miss Another Game on Monday
Tucker Kraft

Done for the Year With Torn ACL
Denny Hamlin

Overtime Four-Tire Call Costs Denny Hamlin the Championship
Chase Briscoe

Championship Bid Never Really Started After Two Tire Failures
Brad Keselowski

Nearly Steals Phoenix Race
David Onama

Suffers First-Round TKO Loss
Steve Garcia

Scores First-Round TKO Win
Ante Delija

Suffers His First UFC Loss
CFB

Dylan Raiola Suffers Season-Ending Injury
Waldo Cortes-Acosta

Gets Knockout Win
Themba Gorimbo

Drops Decision At UFC Vegas 110
Jayden Daniels

Suffers Dislocated Elbow on Sunday Night
Jeremiah Wells

Gets Back In The Win Column
Yadier del Valle

Remains Undefeated
Jayden Daniels

X-Rays Come Back Negative on Jayden Daniels' Left Arm, MRI to Come
Jaelan Phillips

Gets Dealt to Eagles for a Third-Round Pick
Isaac Dulgarian

Cut By UFC Following Submission Loss
Daniel Frunza

Still Winless In The UFC
Charles Radtke

Dominates Daniel Frunza
Allan Nascimento

Gets Submission Win
Philipp Kurashev

Stays Hot on Sunday
Cody Durden

Suffers Second-Round Submission Loss
Lucas Raymond

Extends Point Streak With a Goal
Jake Guentzel

Notches Two Points as Lightning Continue Winning Streak
Leo Carlsson

Establishes New Career High With Six-Game Point Streak
Jonathan Huberdeau

Guns Down Flyers
Matthew Schaefer

Has Historic Multi-Goal Game
Jaylen Warren

Records First Career Two-Touchdown Game in Week 9 Win Over Colts
Michael Pittman Jr.

Leads Colts With Nine Catches in Week 9 Loss at Pittsburgh
Jaxon Smith-Njigba

Continues Historic Pace, Racks Up 129 Yards in Week 9 Win
Tory Horton

Catches Two Touchdowns in Week 9 Win at Washington
Sam Darnold

Nearly Flawless in Dominant Sunday Night Win at Washington
Jayden Daniels

Suffers Gruesome Left-Arm Injury on Sunday Night
Kyren Williams

Goes Over 100 Rushing Yards, Scores in Dominant Win Over Saints
Davante Adams

Continues Red-Zone Dominance in Week 9 Win
Dalton Kincaid

Leads Bills in Receiving Yards in Week 9 Win
Geno Smith

Throws Four Touchdown Passes in Week 9
DJ Moore

Scores Two Touchdowns, Involved in Several Ways Sunday
Kyle Monangai

Capitalizes on Expanded Role in Week 9
Quinn Hughes

Returns to Practice Sunday
Roman Josi

Moved to Injured Reserve
Max Scherzer

Doesn't Plan on Retiring
Michael King

Becomes Free Agent After Declining Mutual Option
Cole Smith

to Miss 3-6 Weeks
Ryan Reaves

Placed on Injured Reserve
NYI

Max Shabanov Not Close to Returning
Tyson Foerster

Won't Play Sunday
Sean Couturier

Returns to Flyers Lineup Sunday
Austin Cindric

is A Driver to Avoid for Phoenix DFS Lineups
Yoshinobu Yamamoto

Named World Series MVP
Alex Bowman

Could Alex Bowman be A Sneaky Tournament Play for Phoenix?
Noah Gragson

Should DFS Players Roster Noah Gragson At Phoenix?
Erik Jones

Is Erik Jones Worth Rostering for DFS at Phoenix?
Connor McDavid

Records Three Assists in Saturday's Win
Michael McDowell

an Easy Recommendation for DFS at Phoenix
Chase Briscoe

Probably Won't Win the Title
Joey Logano

Could Play Spoiler in Championship Battle at Phoenix
Tyler Reddick

Seeking to End Winless Drought, but Probably Won't Have the Speed
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace Looks to Protect Top-10 Points Finish at Phoenix
Brad Keselowski

Hasn't Been Fast at Phoenix With RFK Racing
Daniel Suarez

With Nothing at Stake, Expect Little From Daniel Suarez
Kyle Busch

Qualifies Well, but Will Probably Finish Worse Than he Starts
Chris Buescher

Ryan Preece has a Shot to Overtake Chris Buescher as RFK Racing's Lead Driver
Austin Dillon

Looks to Avoid Finishing Last in NASCAR Playoffs
AJ Allmendinger

A.J. Allmendinger Might be a Worthy DFS Option
Shohei Ohtani

to Start Game 7 of World Series
Alejandro Kirk

X-Rays Come Back Negative on Alejandro Kirk's Hand
Alejandro Kirk

Goes for X-Rays After Being Hit on the Hand
Gleyber Torres

Undergoes Sports-Hernia Surgery
Bo Bichette

Not Expecting to Need Offseason Knee Surgery
George Springer

Back in Leadoff Spot for Game 6 of World Series
David Onama

Set For UFC Vegas 110 Main Event
Steve Garcia

Returns At UFC Vegas 110
Waldo Cortes-Acosta

Set For Co-Main Event
Ante Delija

In Search For His Second UFC Win
Themba Gorimbo

A Favorite At UFC Vegas 110
Jeremiah Wells

Looks To Return To The Win Column
Yadier del Valle

Looks To Remain Undefeated
CFB

Arizona State Quarterback Sam Leavitt Out for the Season
Isaac Dulgarian

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Daniel Frunza

Looks For His First UFC Win
George Springer

"Strong Possibility" That George Springer Returns in Game 6 of World Series
Bryce Miller

Not Expected to Need Elbow Surgery
CFB

Arch Manning Listed as Questionable for Vanderbilt Matchup
CFB

Arion Carter Listed as Questionable Ahead of Oklahoma Matchup
CFB

Jordyn Tyson Questionable for Iowa State Matchup with Hamstring Injury

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP