🖥 TAP TO SAVE 50% WITH CODE THANKS
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 22) - 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 22 of the season.

Welcome to the last Cut List of August. Wait, the last Cut List of August already? Yup, next Sunday is September 1.

Most trade deadlines are past, so that option is out the window for big names. At this point, if you want to offload them, it's a cut. The 10-team list has three of said big names.

Stats are through Friday, August 23, unless otherwise noted. Weekly reminders: Recommendations are for mixed leagues -- redraft, unless otherwise noted, as keeper leagues have their own rules. Recommendations in one league size obviously apply to smaller leagues. You can also feel free to drop a shallower suggestion in a deeper league, but the dividing line is generally there for a reason. And, as usual, you can find ideas on how to replace your cut candidates at the Waiver Wire Pickup List.

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

 

10-Team Cut Candidates

Josh Bell (1B, PIT)

This one is somewhat less theoretical than Aaron Judge last week. Was Josh Bell's first half really that much of a mirage? Well, after hitting .302 in the first half on 162-game paces of 127 runs, 155 RBI, and 50 home runs, he is hitting .203 in the second half and extrapolated to 162 games played would have 68 runs, 68 RBI, and 18 homers. And Bell doesn't have the track record of a Judge to soften this cut suggestion.

The good news is Bell's second half BABIP of .236 is well below his .292 career mark, and he hasn't lost his sense of the strike zone, with 20 walks vs. 30 strikeouts in 188 second half PA. The bad news is his contact in the second half has pretty much deserved his results. His xwOBA of .319 since the All-Star Break ranks 118th out of 213 players with 100+ PA, and is So

So, are we really cutting one of the first half's best power hitters, who is still slugging .570 for the season as a whole? As usual that depends on your team situation. But Bell doesn't steal bases, is a .264 career hitter, and plays for Pittsburgh -- whose whole offense since the All-Star Break, not just Bell's, has dissipated faster than the steel industry. So you are left hoping that his power comes back in the final month, if you do keep him. It's a risk either way at this point of the season, and if the rest of your team is doing well (more likely the smaller the league) but someone interesting is on the wire you have to think carefully.

 

Josh Hader (RP, MIL)

Another category dependent suggestion, this time with strikeouts and saves--if you need them, hold; if not, consider moving on. This is more true of strikeouts, where Hader is always great, and less true of saves, where the trust of his team matters too.

And to that point, Hader hasn't pitched since August 17. He has allowed a run in all five August appearances, blowing four saves and converting only one, on his way to a 11.57 ERA in 4 2/3 innings. To be fair, to give up both a .500 BABIP and 5.8 HR/9 allowed is a tough trick in any sample size. Which reminds me: 4 2/3 innings isn't a lot. The strikeout stuff hasn't gone away, with 10 of those. And Hader has a lot of history behind him of being much better than this.

But sometimes you can't afford to wait and see. The lack of recent usage is concerning, and while the hiatus could do him some good once he does pitch again, it could also portend loss of his closing job. Unless you are in a heated strikeout battle, it's possible there's better use of Hader's roster spot out there.

 

Whit Merrifield (IF/OF, KC)

And this is food for thought for people who need a ton of some things and none of some other things. Merrifield stole 45 bases last season and followed that up by turning 30 this January. He is no longer a star thief: He has 16 steals this season, tied with four others for 20th in MLB, but has been caught eight times, one of six players to lead the Majors with that mark. He's made up for it with 15 home runs, but his calling card is now all-around value rather than great steals with competency elsewhere.

Since the break, that has meant a .285/.343/.437 line with four home runs and three steals in 38 games. It's solid production, sort of like Adam Eaton in a worse lineup before Eaton started going crazy with homers lately. The odds are just very stacked against a burst of steals. When you lose half a step, you lose half a step, and Merrifield crossed a magic age line in January. And so you're left with a decent player who may not shift any categories on their own depending on the standings, in which case the best bet could be to find someone who can swing a category by themselves.

Man, that 10-team list was aggressive. But sometimes you have to think outside the box, even if you don't end up acting outside the box, in order to test the limits of what you are willing to do in pursuit of success. You may not want to cut Bell or Hader or Merrifield (or, say, Manny Machado) just yet -- although Bell's Statcast and Hader's situation are at least somewhat troubling -- but there could come a time. Keep your eyes open.

 

12-Team Cut Candidates

Matt Carpenter (3B, STL)

Matt Carpenter is also a big name, but he's been rough all year. And now he's sat for three straight games. Nursing an injury? It's tempting to ask who cares. He's even a borderline 14-team cut candidate at this point.

His contact hasn't been much better than his results, either, with a .320 xwOBA only 16 points higher than his .304 actual wOBA. The narrative around Carpenter -- that he had a brutal start to last season but was just as brilliant later -- may have caused a few too many holds, and more rosters still have him than don't. Certainly, it's quite late in the season for the turnaround to become a good bet.

Not only that, but if there is a turnaround, it's not as if you are rewarded with multiple months of results. That's not the case early on. The later in the season it gets, the less intense your FOMO needs to be.

 

Justin Upton (OF, LAA)

Time is running out for Upton to get it going this season, having started it only on June 17. It's now been more than two months of .218 hitting with nine home runs and 34 RBI. He is striking out 30.7% of the time. Since his injury this season was a toe, it's no surprise he's not run. 

The contact quality has been rough as well, with a .206 expecting batting average and .305 expected wOBA -- the latter of those matching the actual wOBA of a Ronny Rodriguez or Tucker Barnhart.

Even though Upton's been decent in August, hitting .217/.342/.467, that is much more valuable in OBP or OPS leagues. In BA leagues, that August isn't very confidence-inspiring. Upton is a better bet than Carpenter -- and a much easier hold in deeper leagues than 12 -- but both pose the same question: just how much good would recoveries, should they happen, do?

 

Caleb Smith (SP, MIA)

Smith doesn't have the friendliest remaining schedule after he faces the Reds in Miami Monday. And as great as he was early in the season, it's been a struggle of late. The overall numbers now reflect that: not only a 3.82 ERA, but also a 4.43 xFIP (almost identical to his 4.42 last season) and 4.13 SIERA.

To a lesser extent, categories matter here as well. Miami is one of those special teams where you can be fairly sure that wins won't reveal themselves with any regularity. So if you need those, it should be easier to say bye to Smith. The ERA estimators bode poorly as well.

Since returning from injury on July 6, Smith only has a 4.35 ERA despite a .234 BABIP. Just another warning sign. Hold for the Reds if you like, but it's dangerous to go much beyond that.

 

14-Team Cut Candidates

Nick Senzel (3B/OF, CIN)

Senzel is a poor man's Merrifield (.261/.316/.431, 10 HR, 12 SB), who will help in some places but not in any specific place. (Those darned late-season categories again.) In addition to the lack of a track record, Senzel has some other issues Merrifield clearly does not.

First, although Senzel managed to avoid the injured list since April, he's only played in 90 games total this season. That's in part due to an outfield crunch preceding the Yasiel Puig trade but also in part due to nagging injuries, for instance an elbow issue that kept him out August 19.

It's been a rough August as well, at .179/.210/.282. A rather concerning component: two walks against 22 strikeouts in just 84 plate appearances. That could be the sign of pitchers starting to take fuller advantage of a rookie hitter.

 

Yusei Kikuchi and Marco Gonzales (SP, SEA)

Let's take a look at schedules, shall we? Who still plays Houston and/or the Yankees this season? Well, the Angels have an extremely rough go of it, with 10 of their final 12 games coming against those teams. So watch out for their guys as the season winds down -- Andrew Heaney won't strike out 14 batters every time. But it's a little to early to react to the very last games of the year.

Seattle's immediately upcoming schedule is fairly brutal: at the Yankees August 26-28, then four at Texas' bandbox, followed by two at the Cubs and four in Houston. Gonzales and Kikuchi are their only SP's owned in more than a couple places, but both were 14-team cuts earlier in the year.

They've had varying degrees of success since, with Kikuchi recently throwing a complete game shutout. But both are extremely borderline at best, and the difficult schedule in the near term is enough to let them go for now, especially Kikuchi who is also having his innings managed. Gonzales at least gets Toronto first, but Kikuchi's start against them notwithstanding, they've hit pretty well of late.

 

Last Week's Updates

Player Last Week (links to piece) This Week Reasoning
Aaron Judge 10-Team Stretch Hold Was always really a hold, but if his name were A. A. Ron Juh-Gee, the power coming back this week would help too
Tommy Pham 10-Team Hold I guess the hand was fine after all
Matt Boyd 10-Team Hold I guess he's a hold now, but one more bout with homer-itis and it would be really tempting to send him back again
Khris Davis 12-Team 12-Team He finally hit one more bomb but there's been no real change in profile
Shohei Ohtani 12-Team 10-Team Issues identified last week will remain, but last week did remind of power-speed combo (1 HR, 1 SB)
Dallas Keuchel 12-Team 12-Team No real change in profile, it was Miami
Hunter Pence 14-Team 14-Team Playing time, possible injury
Dustin May 14-Team 14-Team The usual Dodgers jerking guys around
Shane Greene 14-Team 14-Team No change in profile

 

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

Tyrone Tracy Jr.

Scores as a Runner and Receiver in Week 15
Kenley Jansen

Agrees to One-Year Deal With Tigers
Merrill Kelly

Returns to Diamondbacks on Two-Year Deal
Javonte Williams

Returns to Start Second Half on Sunday Night
James Cook

Dominates With Three Touchdowns in Week 15 Win
Amon-Ra St. Brown

has Monster Game in Week 15
Javonte Williams

Questionable to Return in Week 15 With Shoulder Injury
Davante Adams

Rams Pessimistic About Davante Adams' Status for Week 16?
Robert Williams III

Available Against Golden State
Donovan Clingan

Back on Sunday Night
Micah Parsons

Believed to Have Suffered Torn ACL in Sunday's Loss
Puka Nacua

Returns to Sunday's Game
Patrick Mahomes

Suffers Torn ACL
Puka Nacua

Questionable to Return Due to Cramps, Potentially Avoids Injury Scare
Jake Ferguson

Officially Active for Sunday Night
Davante Adams

Exits Sunday's Contest with Hamstring Injury
Micah Parsons

Questionable to Return After Suffering Knee Injury
Christian Watson

Ruled Out with Chest Injury
Christian Watson

Questionable to Return with Chest Injury
Gunnar Helm

Questionable to Return to Sunday's Contest
TreVeyon Henderson

Totals Over 150 Yards and Two Scores in Sunday's Loss
Devin Neal

Ruled Out with Hamstring Injury
Joel Embiid

Cleared for Action on Sunday
Zeev Buium

Has Two Points in Canucks Debut
Trevor Lawrence

Erupts for Six Total Touchdowns in Week 15 Blowout
Anthony Edwards

Remains Out on Sunday Evening
Trey McBride

Sets Records in Week 15 Loss
Nickeil Alexander-Walker

Available Versus Philly
Dylan Holloway

Injured at Sunday's Practice
Patrick Mahomes

Slated for MRI Following Knee Injury
Filip Gustavsson

Takes on Bruins Sunday
Tyrese Maxey

Will Miss Another Game on Sunday Night
Brandon Bussi

Looks to Stretch Winning Streak to Nine Games
Cam York

Returns From Four-Game Absence
Jaccob Slavin

Returns to Action Sunday
Joel Embiid

Questionable Versus Atlanta
Jarrett Allen

Expected to Return on Sunday
Collin Sexton

Unavailable Against Cleveland
Khris Middleton

Still Sidelined Versus Pacers
Alexandre Sarr

Out Again on Sunday
NHL

NHL DFS Picks and Heat Map (Premium Content) - December 14, 2025
Ayo Dosunmu

Unlikely to Play vs. Pelicans
Tyrese Maxey

Trending Toward Second Straight Absence
LaMelo Ball

Misses Third Straight Game
Kristaps Porzingis

Remains Out Versus 76ers
Drew Eubanks

To Miss Time With Thumb Fracture
Evan Mobley

Sidelined 2-4 Weeks With Grade 1 Calf Strain
Viktor Arvidsson

Not Expected to Play Sunday
Elias Pettersson

Unavailable Sunday
Jonas Brodin

to Miss Second Consecutive Game Sunday
Emil Lilleberg

Exits Early Saturday
Will Smith

Hurt in Saturday's Victory
Pavel Dorofeyev

Exits Win With Injury
Jalen Suggs

Injured on Saturday Night, Leaves Arena in a Wheelchair
Haydn Fleury

Cleared to Play
Simon Nemec

to Miss "Some Time"
Jake Evans

Back for Canadiens Saturday
Ilya Lyubushkin

Returns to Stars Lineup Saturday
Roope Hintz

Good to Go Saturday
Charlie Lindgren

Activated From Injured Reserve
Oliver Ekman-Larsson

Available Against Oilers
William Nylander

a Game-Time Decision Saturday
Jorge Polanco

Agrees to Two-Year Deal With Mets
CFB

LaNorris Sellers to Return to South Carolina in 2026
Cason Wallace

Off Injury Report Saturday
Keyonte George

Erupts for Career-High 39 Points Against Memphis
Bones Hyland

Exits Early With Knee Contusion
CFB

Washington State Expected to Hire Kirby Moore as Next Head Coach
CFB

Kyle Whittingham Stepping Down as Utah Head Coach
Manel Kape

Set For UFC Vegas 112 Main Event
Brandon Royval

An Underdog At UFC Vegas 112
Kevin Vallejos

Set For His Third UFC Fight
Giga Chikadze

In Dire Need Of Victory
Cesar Almeida

Set To Welcome Cezary Oleksiejczuk To The UFC
Cezary Oleksiejczuk

Set To Make His UFC Debut
Maikel Garcia

Royals Agree on Five-Year Extension
Melquizael Costa

Looks To Extend His Win Streak
Morgan Charrière

Morgan Charriere Looks to Win Second Consecutive Fights
Marcus Buchecha

Looks To Bounce Back
Kennedy Nzechukwu

A Favorite At UFC Vegas 112
King Green

Returns At UFC Vegas 112
Lance Gibson jr

Lance Gibson Jr. Set To Open Up UFC Vegas 112 Main Card
CFB

Sherrone Moore Charged with Home Invasion, Among Other Charges
CFB

Freddie Kitchens Fired from North Carolina Coaching Staff
CFB

Bryce Underwood Could Leave Michigan Without Buyout
Fernando Tatis Jr.

Padres Not Considering Trading Fernando Tatis Jr.
Tarik Skubal

Tigers Engaged in "Serious Talks" Around Trading Tarik Skubal at the Winter Meetings
CFB

Chris Brazzell II Declaring for NFL Draft
CFB

Fernando Mendoza Named AP College Football Player of the Year
Raisel Iglesias

to Remain the Braves Closer
Robert Suarez

Agrees on Three-Year Deal With Braves
CFB

Sherrone Moore Remains in Police Custody
CFB

Joe Klanderman Joining Baylor Coaching Staff
CFB

Kentucky Hiring Jay Bateman as Next Defensive Coordinator
Si Woo Kim

Closes 2025 With Strong Finish Among Putting Woes
Akshay Bhatia

Looks to Rebound in 2026 After Down Year Off the Tee
Brian Harman

2025 Season a Step Back Despite Spring Win
Sam Burns

' Elite Putting Headlines a Solid 2025 Season
Sepp Straka

Ends Stellar 2025 Campaign on a High Note
Robert MacIntyre

Closes Out a Steady 2025 Campaign
CFB

Chip Kelly Interviews for Georgia Tech Offensive Coordinator Job
CFB

Louisville Receiver Chris Bell has a Torn ACL
Min Woo Lee

Breaks Through to Win in Texas This Year
PGA

Alex Noren Wins Twice on European Tour This Year
Wyndham Clark

has Up-and-Down 2025 Golf Season
CFB

Michigan Fires Head Coach Sherrone Moore
Corey Conners

Comes Close to Winning Again in Very Good 2025
Justin Rose

Turns Back the Clock in 2025
CFB

Jim Knowles Expected to be Hired as Tennessee's Defensive Coordinator
Harris English

Enjoys Solid Finish at Hero World Challenge
CFB

Defensive Coordinator Jim Knowles Not Being Retained at Penn State
CFB

Indiana's Stephen Daley Done for Season After Post-Game Injury
Pete Alonso

Orioles Finalizing Five-Year Deal
Kyle Finnegan

Tigers, Kyle Finnegan Agree on Two-Year Deal
Bo Bichette

Red Sox Out on Bo Bichette For Now
Philadelphia Phillies

Phillies Extend Manager Rob Thomson Through 2027 Season
Michael King

the Mets' Top Rotation Target?
Ronald Acuña Jr.

Ronald Acuna Jr. Could Move Back to Leadoff Spot
CFB

Florida, Wisconsin Among Suitors for QB Transfer Kenny Minchey
CFB

Bryan Harsin, Justin Wilcox Candidates for Washington State Head Coach Job?
Edwin Díaz

Edwin Diaz Agrees to Deal With the Dodgers
Kyle Schwarber

Returning to Phillies on Five-Year Deal
CFB

Ole Miss Hiring John David Baker as Offensive Coordinator
CFB

Ty Howle the Top Target for Virginia Tech Offensive Coordinator Job

RANKINGS

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