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

The Cut List (Week 8) - Time to Let Go?

Nate Green's list of busts and overvalued players who fantasy baseball owners may want to consider cutting and dropping for Week 8 of the season.

May is half over. That's scarcely believable, but it's true. Much more believable but equally true: there are plenty of players that should be axed. April showers can't bring May flowers for everyone, and some players even got that proverb mixed up: they are following up April flowers with damp May production. This analogy is failing, so let's move on to the serious part.

Stats are through Friday, May 17. As we say every week: Remember that these recommendations are for standard leagues up to 12 teams, which of course means the players can be dropped in shallower leagues than 12. However, formats like dynasty or AL/NL-only are a completely different ballgame (so to speak).

As usual, you can find a replacement for all of these cut candidates at the Waiver Wire Pickup List. Suggestions are also considered below, but if you don't like them, check out the rest of the list.

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

 

Week 8 Cut Candidates

Danny Jansen (C, TOR)

Until now there have yet to be any catchers listed among cut possibilities all year. It's just such a punt this season. Want to see if Austin Barnes puts it together? You like the talent, so why not. Want to cut Austin Barnes instead of waiting around? Jason Castro is hot and you've got to try to catch fire. But will Jason Castro be a good hitter all year? Maybe not, so perhaps hold on to your catcher, who is presumably on your roster for a reason. Is it Austin Barnes? You get the idea.

Danny Jansen, who finally hit his first home run of the season on Friday, bringing his season line to .173/.261/.245, is one of the catching position's biggest punts this season. He hit .247/.347/.432 in 95 rookie PA last season for a 115 wRC+ and since catcher is so weak, that made him a top ten option entering the season. But you may have noticed his line this year is...not great, Bob.

Hate the catching landscape all you want and put your hopes on a recent homer if you wish, but the truth is there are some catchers doing quite well. It's just most of them have a history of not being good. Jansen's 95 plate appearance debut last season isn't much history either, however. He can be dropped.

Pickup suggestion: Castro. More on Castro here. Although he's only suggested as a two-catcher league option, there is an argument to try him out in any league and see what sticks, and argument that once again is rooted in the barrenness of the catcher landscape.

Kiké Hernandez (IF/OF, LAD)

Hernandez began to approach if not achieve fantasy relevance last season with a .256/.336/.470 line, 21 home runs, and three steals in 145 games for the Dodgers. Eligible at several positions, Hernandez appeared to take a leap to start the 2019 season, as he homered twice on Opening Day and was hitting .292/.382/.585 by April 19. Since then? .173/.236/.284.

Neither version is the "real" Hernandez. That's probably something between last year and the sum of this year to date. Given the 118 wRC+ last season and 94 this year, that would make him a somewhat above average hitter, which is what the projections show.

If Hernandez were an everyday player, that would be useful. Despite the 145 games last year, he only had 462 plate appearances, however. He's playing more often this year, having started 37 games and appeared in 43 of Los Angeles' 46. That is somewhat close to full time, but not enough for a struggling borderline asset.

Pickup suggestion: Consider riding the Ronny Rodriguez wave. More on Rodriguez here. His hot hand could expire soon, but there are colder ones to ride for a little while. He offers similar multi-positional eligibility.

Marco Gonzales (SP, SEA)

A couple weeks ago we wrote about Dereck Rodriguez, who was soon sent down. Gonzales is the better pitcher, and won't get sent down any time remotely soon, but he is not without his flaws. One one significant shortcoming he shares with Rodriguez: neither are strikeout guys. Gonzales has a 19.4 career K% which was 21.1% last season, but in 2019 so far he's only fanning 17.0% of batters.

And when you're not a strikeout guy, you have to be pretty good to be a fantasy asset. To some level, Gonzales may seem to fit the description: despite a few bad starts, he holds a 3.65 ERA and 3.85 FIP in 2019. Unfortunately, the other two, more predictive ERA/ERA-comparative metrics aren't as optimistic, as Gonzales has a 5.00 xFIP and 4.86 SIERA this season. Also unfortunate, those bad starts have come recently. He has a 5.94 ERA with just 11 strikeouts in his four starts in May, having lasted only 16 2/3 innings.

To be fair, these cruddy starts have come against four very good offenses (Cubs, Yankees, Red Sox, Twins). It won't get any easier, however, with his next start at Texas' small ballpark and powerful lineup. Plus, if you're going to roster a starting pitcher as more than a streamer, he needs to have some successes against good offenses, otherwise there's no source of confidence when facing middling or weaker offenses.

The short version of the argument to cut Gonzales, based in part on his lesser strikeout numbers, is that he lacks the upside that makes his downside worthwhile.

Miles Mikolas (SP, STL)

Mikolas is in the same boat as Gonzales: he just doesn't strike out enough batters, and after a successful 2018 the cracks are starting to show in '19. With a 4.36 xFIP and 4.47 SIERA, he's been slightly unlucky to have a 4.88 ERA, but not so unlucky as to justify the 16.0% K rate for fantasy purposes. That represents a decline from the 18.1% that Mikolas posted in 2018. Additionally, batters have only swung and missed at 7.5% of Mikolas' offerings in 2019 after a 9.6% rate last season.

Unlike Gonzales, who had better peripherals than ERA in 2018, Mikolas put up somewhat of a mirage in last season. Despite a 2.83 ERA, he had a 3.67 xFIP and 3.93 SIERA. Even a 3.93 ERA would have been fantasy-valuable on a team like the Cardinals, who gave Mikolas 18 wins (albeit with Mikolas giving them the 2.83 ERA). However, it's a bare minimum that can't withstand a half-run increase as it has in 2019.

Pickup suggestion: To replace either Gonzales or Mikolas, consider Kyle Gibson. AL Central pitchers are good to have because they can attack the division's relatively weak offenses. Unlike the two cut suggestions, Gibson has a sub-four xFIP (3.41) and SIERA (3.77). He's also working on steady gains in K-BB%: 8.8 in 2017 to 12.1 in 2018 to 17.3 this year.

Jason Heyward (OF, CHC)

On April 27, Heyward was hitting .329/.456/.557 with five home runs and four steals, putting him back on the fantasy map for the first time in years. Was it the proverbial dead cat bounce? He's only hitting .141/.197/.254 since then.

Heyward has a lot of history built up, none of it good in even the moderately recent past. He has never been an above average hitter by wRC+ in his Cubs career, which began in 2016. Even though '16 was the worst of it, and he became a league average hitter in 2018, he only hit eight home runs, hardly worth a thing in fantasy.

Heyward has also, of course, had streaks similar to his first month of 2019. For instance, from June 2 to July 3 of last season, he hit .333/.368/.519. It just so happens this year's hot streak came at the beginning of the year.

If you got Heyward early enough to benefit from his hot start, congratulations, but holding on now is overly optimistic based on what Heyward's given fantasy players before.

Pickup suggestion: It's another older player with a poor track record, but Jarrod Dyson might be worth a try. More on Dyson here. If Heyward's start still has you expecting the mid-teens in home runs (despite the eight last year and recent cold spell), Dyson won't do that, but he'll more than make up for it in steals.

 

Watch-Out List

Rougned Odor (2B, TEX)

Nomar Mazara (OF, TEX)

Asdrubal Cabrera (IF, TEX)

Once Elvis Andrus returns from his hamstring injury, the Rangers could have one too many hitters if Willie Calhoun and Hunter Pence continue to succeed. Caution and attention should be the objective for now. All three of Mazara, Odor, and Cabrera have been questionable as fantasy assets so far this season.

Odor has been the Rangers' worst non-catching hitter for most of the year, although he's swung a hot bat lately. Through May 15, he was hitting .146/.221/.272. Just two games have lifted his OPS by more than 100 points to .610. Some owners have cut loose already, but those who haven't might as well hang on for now to see if the three home run surge is mostly real, or if Odor fades again.

Mazara has been a breakout candidate for several years but is off to another subpar year in 2019. Hitting .252/.317/.435 with six home runs barely suffices for fantasy purposes as is. If he loses any playing time, he's toast.

Cabrera may be the riskiest Ranger in the near future. It's close between him and Mazara. He's hitting slightly worse than Mazara at .219/.299/.422. Although he has multi-positional infield eligibility, more useful than an outfielder-only given equal production, he could stand to be at higher risk of lost playing time when Andrus returns. Also, at 33 years old, his struggles could be more meaningful than Mazara's. Careers have ended quicker.

All three players are probably holds for now, but the performance of Calhoun and Pence has to be watched almost as carefully as the performance of these watch-out players themselves. If Calhoun struggles and is selected for a demotion when Andrus returns, the Odor-Mazara-Cabrera trio survives -- assuming they start hitting.

 

Last Week's Updates

Player Last Week This Week Reasoning
Tim Beckham Cut Cut Homered last week but only played in three games, 10 PA, .200/.200/.600
Harrison Bader Cut Cut Even though he homered in his only start this past week, it was his only start
Travis Shaw Cut Cut/Stash Now that he's on the IL he can be stashed if you have the room, but if you don't, no problem
Kyle Freeland Cut Cut 3 ER, 6 IP QS against Boston in last start, but they were all homers; beware
A. J. Minter Cut Cut Still demoted
Jose Leclerc Watch Out Cut He keeps going back and forth, but the fact he was used as an opener suggests regaining the closer role is still a long way off
Sonny Gray Watch Out Cut Mediocre start against the Cubs in last outing and at Milwaukee next; hold if you want but that's a lot of bench-and-see

More Fantasy Baseball Busts and Avoids




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

Alex Bowman

Delivers Bravura Performance After Michigan Injury
Tyler Reddick

Inexplicably Mediocre on His Once-Best Track Type
John Hunter Nemechek

Canny Strategy Gives John Hunter Nemechek Best Career Road Course Finish
Cole Custer

Earns Best Finish Since Cup Series Comeback at Mexico City
Grant Holmes

Punches Out 15 in Loss
Elly De La Cruz

Goes Yard in Fourth Straight Game
Will Vest

Dealing With Finger Injury
Jackson Merrill

Placed on Seven-Day Concussion Injured List
J.J. McCarthy

Looking "a Lot Stronger"
Shohei Ohtani

Will Be Dodgers' Starting Pitcher Monday
Roki Sasaki

Shut Down From Throwing
Garrett Wilson

Receives New Contract Offer
Jordan Hicks

Headed to Boston
Kyle Harrison

Traded to Red Sox
Travis Kelce

Slims Down During the Offseason
Trey Hendrickson

Bengals Restart Contract Discussions
Brady House

Nationals Promoting Brady House to Major Leagues
Rafael Devers

Traded to San Francisco
Logan Gilbert

to Start on Monday
Jayden Higgins

Impresses During Minicamp
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope

on the Move to Memphis
Cole Anthony

Dealt to the Grizzlies
Seattle Seahawks

DeMarcus Lawrence Making an Impression With his New Team
Isaiah Simmons

Being Used Exclusively as a Linebacker
Tyler Mahle

Placed on 15-Day Injured List
Travis Etienne Jr.

the Jaguars Lead Back?
Luis Robert Jr.

Scratched with Thumb Soreness
Desmond Bane

Traded to Orlando
Byron Buxton

Scratched from Sunday's Lineup
Daniel Jones

the Favorite in Colts QB Competition?
Brendan Donovan

Returns to the Lineup
Steven Adams

Rockets Agree to Three-Year Contract Extension
Royce Lewis

Hits 10-Day Injured List
Ty Dillon

Is a Respectable Cap Flexiblity-Focused DFS Option For Mexico City
Corey Perry

Produces 10th Postseason Goal
Connor McDavid

Scores First Finals Goal
John Hunter Nemechek

Is John Hunter Nemechek Worth Rostering In Mexico City DFS Lineups?
Shohei Ohtani

Blasts Two Homers in Win
Sam Bennett

Nets Another Road Goal in Game 5 Win
Eetu Luostarinen

Earns Two Points Saturday
Michael King

Not Making Progress
Brad Marchand

Pots Two Goals in Game 5 Victory
Jackson Merrill

Removed Early on Saturday
Sergei Bobrovsky

Ties NHL Record with 10th Road Win
Ross Chastain

Trackhouse Racing's Mexico Focus Makes Ross Chastain a Leading Contender for the Win
Kyle Busch

One of Two Past Mexico City Winners in the Field
Ryan Preece

Earns Surprising Front-Row Start
Austin Cindric

Not as Strong of a Road Racer as People Think
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace Stronger on Infield Road Courses Than Purpose-Built Ones
Joey Logano

Seemingly Alternating Between Good and Mediocre Races
Brad Keselowski

One of the Few Drivers with Mexico City Experience
Denny Hamlin

Ryan Truex Makes First Cup Series Start Since 2014
Erik Jones

Mexico City Will Likely be a Struggle for Erik Jones
Noah Gragson

Front Row Motorsports' Speed May Make Noah Gragson a Decent DFS Option
Ricky Stenhouse Jr

Road Courses Are Ricky Stenhouse Jr.'s Worst Track Type
Riley Herbst

Surprisingly Outqualifies 23XI Racing Teammates at Mexico City
Cody Ware

a Very Experienced Road Racer but Still a Long Shot
Shane Van Gisbergen

Shane van Gisbergen the Heavy Favorite to Win in Mexico City
Christopher Bell

the Chalk DFS Play in Mexico City
Giancarlo Stanton

Likely Returning Early Next Week
Spencer Strider

Registers 13 Strikeouts
Emeka Egbuka

"the Talk" of Bucs Minicamp
Evander Kane

Drops to Fourth Line Saturday
Kasperi Kapanen

Won't Play on Saturday
Calvin Pickard

Starts Game 5 for Oilers
Jaxson Dart

Working as No. 2 QB During Offseason Workouts
Xavier Gipson

Roster Spot Could be in Jeopardy
Josh Reynolds

the Front-Runner for WR2 Duties
Garrett Wilson

Stock Up This Offseason
Breece Hall

Motivated Going into 2025 Season
Brandon Aiyuk

Making Good Progress From Knee Injury
Keon Coleman

Inconsistent at Minicamp
Mitchell Trubisky

Not a Lock for Backup Job
Dalton Kincaid

Adds Strength and Bulk
James Cook

a Full Participant in Mandatory Minicamp
Tyrese Haliburton

Struggles in Friday's Loss to OKC
Chet Holmgren

Dominates the Glass in Game 4
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Leads the Way in Game 4
Jalen Williams

Has a Quality Showing on Friday Night
Anthony Richardson

Should be Fine for Training Camp
Russell Westbrook

to Decline Player Option
Kevin Durant

Trade Could Happen in the "Next Few Days"
Joaquin Buckley

Set For Main Event
Kamaru Usman

An Underdog At UFC Atlanta
Miranda Maverick

Set For Co-Main Event
Rose Namajunas

Looks To Bounce Back
Andre Petroski

Looks To Extend His Win Streak To Four
Edmen Shahbazyan

A Favorite At UFC Atlanta
Raoni Barcelos

Set To Take On Former Champion
Cody Garbrandt

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Mansur Abdul-Malik

Looks For His Third UFC Win
Cody Brundage

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Alonzo Menifield

Opens Up UFC Atlanta Main Card
Oumar Sy

Looks To Remain Undefeated
Connor Hellebuyck

Wins Vezina And Hart Trophies
Aleksander Barkov

Records Two Power-Play Assists Thursday
Sam Reinhart

Collects Three Points in Thursday's Loss
Matthew Tkachuk

Notches Three Points in Losing Effort
Calvin Pickard

Joins Exclusive List with Thursday's Win
Mattias Ekholm

Logs Two Assists in Comeback Victory
Leon Draisaitl

Delivers Victory in Overtime Thursday
Myles Turner

Playing Through Illness
Reed Sheppard

Will Play in the NBA Summer League
Kevin Durant

Deal Could Come Sooner Rather Than Later
Dorian Finney-Smith

Undergoes Ankle Surgery
Anze Kopitar

Wins Third Lady Byng Trophy
Sergei Bobrovsky

Heading Out for Win No. 15
John Klingberg

Won't Play in Game 4 Against Panthers
Viktor Arvidsson

Sits Out Game 4 Against Panthers
Stuart Skinner

Remains in Oilers Crease Thursday
Jalen Williams

Leads Thunder in Scoring Wednesday
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Settles for 24 Points in Game 3 Loss
Pascal Siakam

Does Everything for Pacers Wednesday Night
Tyrese Haliburton

Gets Close to Triple-Double in Game 3 Win
Bennedict Mathurin

Leads All Scorers with 27 Points Wednesday
Brandin Podziemski

Has Second Offseason Surgery
Jaylen Brown

Undergoes Successful Knee Procedure
Matt McCarty

Comes Off Season-Best Showing at RBC Canadian Open
Justin Thomas

Desperate to Continue Good 2025 Season
Jon Rahm

Seeks Revenge at U.S. Open
Tom Kim

Aiming for Improvement in U.S. Open
PGA

Sungjae Im Expects Solid Performance at Oakmont
Brian Harman

Aims to Rebound From the Memorial
Tony Finau

has Been Up and Down at U.S. Open
Patrick Cantlay

Hoping This is the Year at Oakmont
Akshay Bhatia

Improving in Time for U.S. Open
Xander Schauffele

Primed for Another Major Championship Run
Cameron Young

May Struggle at U.S. Open
Collin Morikawa

Eyeing Third Major Championship Title
Matt Fitzpatrick

Seeks to Avenge Oakmont Collapse
Jordan Spieth

Can Contend at Oakmont
Shane Lowry

a Strong Value Play at U.S. Open
Brooks Koepka

Seeks Another Major Win at Oakmont
Viktor Hovland

Still Can Improve at U.S. Open
Michael Kim

a Boom-or-Bust Value Play at U.S. Open
Russell Henley

Looking to Play the Weekend at Oakmont
Tyrrell Hatton

a Safe Option at U.S. Open
Bryson DeChambeau

Eyeing Third U.S. Open Title
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF