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

2020 Offseason First Base Rankings - Fantasy Baseball Mixed Leagues

Nick's first base fantasy baseball rankings for the upcoming 2020 season in 5x5 roto mixed leagues - including rankings from the #1 most accurate industry expert.

It's never too early to start looking ahead to the next baseball season, so here we deliver our 2020 fantasy baseball rankings to those of you looking to scratch your fantasy itch. Whether you're already eliminated from fantasy football contention, or you're getting a head start on next year's keeper selections, RotoBaller has got you covered. We've assembled a collection of stout minds, including the #1 ranked expert from 2018, Nick Mariano, to help you get a jump start on your competition for the upcoming season.

With the Winter Meetings approaching and free-agency starting to materialize, there will be plenty of movement with these rankings before the draft season gets into full swing. Be sure to check in frequently during the offseason as we'll have updated rankings as soon as big names begin to change places.

Today, we'll analyze the first base position. This position provides serious pop, with 16 players within our top-130. However, it drops off pretty quickly after that, so tread carefully in deeper leagues with CI slots. Still, there's plenty of fun to be had here and you don't need to select a top-five bat to be okay. The world is our oyster and early ADP data is trickling in, so let's run down the line towards first for some 2020 rankings.

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

 

First Base Tiered Ranks - 5x5 Mixed Leagues (December)

In case you missed it, our very own "Big Pick Nick" Mariano was named the #1 overall most accurate industry expert ranker for the 2018 season.

Ranking Tier Player Position Nick Nick G Riley
1 1 Cody Bellinger 1B/OF 5 6 4
2 1 Freddie Freeman 1B 16 16 12
3 2 Pete Alonso 1B 38 38 22
4 2 Anthony Rizzo 1B 44 35 45
5 2 Paul Goldschmidt 1B 55 51 42
6 3 Matt Olson 1B 63 72 92
7 3 Jose Abreu 1B 97 85 61
8 3 DJ LeMahieu 1B/2B/3B 81 88 74
9 3 Josh Bell 1B 68 92 139
10 3 Max Muncy 1B/2B/3B 102 104 98
11 3 Trey Mancini 1B/OF 103 109 101
12 4 Carlos Santana 1B 107 94 140
13 4 Yuli Gurriel 1B/3B 118 119 107
14 4 Miguel Sano 1B/3B 124 111 121
15 4 Rhys Hoskins 1B 130 117 122
16 4 Danny Santana 1B/2B/3B/SS/OF 113 113 161
17 5 Ryan McMahon 1B/3B/2B 127 123 201
18 5 Hunter Dozier 1B/3B/OF 164 166 154
19 5 Edwin Encarnacion 1B 173 157 162
20 5 Christian Walker 1B 163 167 166
20 5 Luke Voit 1B 183 181 144
21 5 Joc Pederson 1B/OF 186 161 172
22 6 Mark Canha 1B 196 170 239
23 6 Joey Votto 1B 199 199 213
24 6 Eric Hosmer 1B 195 197 225
25 6 Renato Nunez 1B/3B 217 202 229
26 6 Michael Chavis 1B/2B 232 239 178
27 6 Daniel Vogelbach 1B 205 219 253
28 6 Yandy Diaz 1B/3B 230 242 221
29 6 C.J. Cron 1B 292 #N/A 197
30 6 Daniel Murphy 1B 257 226 292
31 6 Nate Lowe 1B 219 #N/A 312
32 6 Albert Pujols 1B 252 233 314
33 6 Wil Myers 1B/OF 222 258 357
34 7 Eric Thames 1B/OF 359 #N/A 241
35 7 Christian Vazquez C/1B 347 290 272
36 7 Howie Kendrick 1B/2B/3B 300 300 322
37 7 Miguel Cabrera 1B 303 #N/A 373
38 7 Mitch Moreland 1B 304 #N/A 378
39 7 Matt Beaty 1B/3B/OF 342 #N/A #N/A
40 7 Garrett Cooper 1B 330 #N/A 356
41 7 Brandon Belt 1B/OF 351 #N/A #N/A
42 7 Justin Smoak 1B 332 #N/A 371
43 7 Josh VanMeter 1B/2B/OF 366 #N/A 345
44 7 Travis D'Arnaud C/1B 420 #N/A 338
45 7 Marwin Gonzalez 1B/3B/OF 382 #N/A #N/A
46 8 Wilmer Flores 1B/2B 406 #N/A #N/A
47 8 Jesus Aguilar 1B 470 #N/A 367
48 8 Ji-Man Choi 1B 437 #N/A #N/A
49 8 Jeimer Candelario 1B/3B 472 #N/A #N/A
50 8 Rio Ruiz 1B/3B 487 #N/A #N/A
51 8 Ronny Rodriguez 1B/2B/SS 493 #N/A #N/A
52 8 Sam Travis 1B 494 #N/A #N/A
53 8 Brandon Dixon 1B/OF 497 #N/A #N/A
54 8 Neil Walker 1B/3B 498 #N/A #N/A

 

Tier One

Clearly we prefer Cody Bellinger to Freddie Freeman, but you’re getting a cornerstone in either. Bellinger shook off his sophomore slump with a wild .305/.406/.629 slash, 47 homers and 15 steals. A true five-category stud in his age-23 season, we can’t ignore that he destroyed April and then was simply “very good” rather than elite. You’re buying the composite player, one who may hit 14 homers with five steals and a .431 average in any given month.

Freeman’s lesser speed profile yields a lower ceiling, but Freddie has swiped at least six bags in the last four seasons. In true 2019 fashion, Freeman set career-highs in runs (113), homers (38) and RBI (121). His teammates make for an elite offense that should keep the counting stats high, even if that 23.6% HR/FB rate from ‘19 comes back towards his 16.7% career mark. He’d never been above 20% before! With at least 158 games played in three of his last four years, you can confidently buy into Freddie early.

 

Tier Two

This next crop brings two veterans in Anthony Rizzo and Paul Goldschmidt, as well as 2019’s N.L. Rookie of the Year, Pete Alonso.

Alonso obliterated the juiced ball, tagging 53 homers alongside a respectable .260 average and a Home Run Derby crown. His 9.5% Barrels per Plate Appearance (Brls/PA) mark was 13th among 406 hitters with at least 100 batted-ball events, but a 42.3% rate of 95+ MPH balls was only 97th. His swing seems tailor-made for those barrel swings, lining up the sweet spot with launch angle. This requires further digging on my part. Anticipate 35-40 homers in 2020 and note he hit .235 in the second half (.280 in the first,) so let’s hope he just tired as his first full season progressed.

Rizzo’s value fell with fewer steal attempts and a failure to crack 100 RBI for the first time since 2014, but he still turned 613 PAs into 27 homers and a career-best .293 average and .405 on-base percentage. Banking on a high average, 25-30 homers and ~175 R+RBI shouldn’t go sour. His production should be relatively protected from any offseason deals, as he's been a stud while Kris Bryant's been out already.

Note that each of us has a different order within this group. I follow the consensus, with Nick G going Rizzo-Alonso-Goldy and Riley going Alonso-Goldy-Rizzo. If you don’t know your draft room well, you may have to get aggressive to snag your preferred bat here.

 

Tier Three

Undeterred by a broken hamate bone, Matt Olson mashed 36 homers in just 127 games (547 PAs,) reminding us of his 24 HRs in 59 games (216 PAs) back in 2017. His 97.1 mph average exit velocity on flies and line drives ranked 10th out of 406 hitters (min. 100 BBEs) as he earned the results. Don’t blindly project 48 HRs based on last season, but 40 is viable in his age-26 campaign.

I feel better about Jose Abreu after his three-year, $50 million contract with the White Sox, as that above-average lineup could yield another 200+ R+RBI total in ‘20. He’d move up about 15-20 spots for me upon a re-roll, perhaps more. The ChiSox have been aggressive in building a potent offense and have been further tied to Marcell Ozuna, which would be a bit ridiculous to me. Abreu has yielded at least 550 PAs in each of his six seasons, topping 665 in four of his last five, with durability justifying an early draft slot for his age-33 season.

DJ LeMahieu blossomed into a New York superstar in ‘19, hitting .327 with 26 homers, 109 runs, 102 RBI and five steals from atop the Bronx lineup. His opposite-field approach played well at Yankee Stadium, as the 2016 NL Batting Champion was an RISP hero. LeMahieu hit a wild .392 over 144 PAs with runners in scoring position, the highest average among RISP leaders with at least 50 PAs. I can't expect that again, but it illustrates the opportunity granted to players the bat within upper-echelon offenses.

Josh Bell brings our first huge disagreement, as I have him at 68 and Riley sits at 139. This comes after his third full MLB season saw him bash 37 HRs with 210 R+RBI and a .277.367/.569 triple slash in 143 games. Bell’s line rises to .297/.387/.615 against righties, but his ceiling is limited due to a lesser .224/.313/.448 line against southpaws. PIT won’t press him into suboptimal at-bats, so plan accordingly. I’d rather own him and work around that, whereas Riley clearly doesn’t!

Max Muncy has crushed 35 homers in back-to-back seasons now, showing reliable power despite LAD’s playing-time shuffles. Trey Mancini’s low-average 2018 looks like a blip, as he’s hit above .290 in ‘17 and ‘19. He upped his zone-contact rate by two percentage points and shaved five percentage points off the soft-contact rate, which helped his ISO jump from .174 to .244. I'll buy after the 100 mark, though my RBI expectations are lower than his 97 in '18 without Jonathan Villar at the top.

 

Tier Four

We are mostly in agreement across the board here, though Nick G is more bullish on Carlos Santana, Miguel Sano and Rhys Hoskins. 

Santana enjoyed his return to Cleveland, turning his ninth straight season of 600 or more plate appearances while tying a career-high with 34 homers. He also turned in career-bests with 110 runs, 93 RBI and a .281 average. A points-league stud due to a gaudy walk rate, Santana solid contact rates play nicely with today’s "lively" ball that is totally just a product of inconsistent seams. Yeah.

Sano has yet to top 500 PAs in a season, but still generated a 50-homer pace with 34 dingers in 105 games. I'm not sure how Steamer projects over 600 PAs for the guy, but "caveat emptor," I suppose. His insane 36.3% career strikeout rate supplies a low floor, but 40-plus homers is quite real should his health hold up.

He outdid Hoskins, that's for sure, as Rhys only pieced together 29 homers on 705 PAs and saw his Z-Contact% drop from 87.4% to 84%. Swing big can work, but it's hard to absorb such a dropoff without towering results when contact is made. Hoskins posted the highest average launch angle out of hitters with at least 150 batted balls -- 24 degrees -- with an uninspiring 5.5% Brls/PA rate. We'll see if he can at least bring that down towards the 22.2 degrees that Mike Trout posted in '18, but I'm not paying a lot to find out.

 

Tier Five

Once again, we’re largely in agreement here. Myself and Nick G are much higher on Ryan McMahon, while Riley is buying Luke Voit. McMahon faces an uphill battle for playing time in Colorado, but we saw his potential in the second half. He hit .313 in July and then hit eight homers with 36 R+RBI in August. It's conceivable that Garrett Hampson leapfrogs him this spring, but I'll happily take a Coors Field lotto ticket around the 150 pick.

I imagine Voit’s draft stock will rise as the Yankees’ plan for 2020 falls into place, but he was dynamic prior to injury and the glut is more on the 3B/SS side for NYY. Gio Urshela is likely the odd man out, with Miguel Andujar, Gleyber Torres, DJ LeMahieu and Voit as the primary infield set. Andujar's been linked to trade rumors and Voit is trending towards everyday 1B duties, with additional clarity likely hiking his ADP. An interesting note on Voit: After posting a league-leading 12.4% Brls/PA rate in '18 (n>100), he posted a 7.5% mark in '19 with near-identical exit velocity on flies and liners (96.4 mph in '18, 95.4 mph in '19) but lost heat on grounders (87.8 mph to 82.6 mph.)

Perhaps that's tied to his core injury that he played through most of July with before shutting things down. He'd left one of the Yankees' London games after pulling up rounding first base, which stunk for us all in '19 but may yield massive profits for us in 2020. In 78 games, 349 PAs, prior to his injury, Voit had 17 homers with 53 runs scored, 50 RBI and a .280/.393/.509 slash line. When you go back to 8/24/18, when Voit became a regular starter in the Bronx, his slash goes up to .300/.402/.580 with 31 homers in just 478 PAs. Yes, his is a bat worth speculation. I don't want to believe that Aaron Boone would cap this upside with 4-5 starts per week, but I can't rule that out.

 

Tier Six

We lead off with Mark Canha, who took one of 2019’s bigger jumps in plate discipline. Not only did he boost 2018’s 8.3% walk rate to 13.5%, but he dropped the rate of swinging at balls outside the zone from 31.1% to 25%. He also lowered his zone-contact rate by three percentage points, with that increased selectivity yielding a .913 OPS with 26 homers in just 497 PAs. The A’s (rightfully) won’t lean on him against southpaws, but those with deeper benches should juggle Canha for those RHP matchups.

Both Joey Votto and Eric Hosmer are simply “over the hump” and out of my life. While I have to account for their accumulating stats as likely everyday players in 2020, I’m hunting upside past pick 200. Let’s see where C.J. Cron lands, if Wil Myers can recapture his power-speed prime, whether Daniel Vogelbach got figured out or tired out in the second half, or if Michael Chavis can trim that absurd 33.2% strikeout rate.

My favorite current value would be someone we agree on -- Yandy Diaz. Last season was his first year as a starter, and he flexed launch-angle enhancements with 14 homers in just 79 games. I realize a 30-homer season ain’t what it used to be, but that pace is still plenty valuable.

 

Tiers Seven & Eight

Largely thought of as a second baseman, Howie Kendrick made the majority of his 2019 starts covering for the injured Ryan Zimmerman at first base. He’d only logged 160 PAs in 2018, and was an afterthought heading into his age-35 campaign. Of course, his .344/.395/.572 slash line would blow away his previous career-best marks. His 17 homers in 370 PAs made for yet another 30-homer pace while he posted a career-low 13.2% strikeout rate. I can’t speak for the other rankers, but I know I’d buried him this low because his PT in 2020 was initially a huge unknown. Having re-signed with Washington, I feel confident he could nab 500+ PAs in ‘20.

The signing of Mike Moustakas pushes Josh VanMeter’s HR/SB upside further down the totem pole, but he’s not someone to forget about towards the end of deep drafts. As a rookie getting disjointed PT, VanMeter hit eight homers with nine steals over 260 PAs. A near-silent 20/20 seasonal pace is backed by the minor-league track record, with room for average improvement as well. Perhaps Aristides Aquino fizzles out or injuries strike and VanMeter finds 400 PAs and flirts with 15/15 in ‘20. The signing of Shogo Akiyama does dampen my enthusiasm, though.

I will point out that two names aren't present on the table as it ran in early December, but Seattle's Evan White and Baltimore's Ryan Mountcastle would intrigue me. We'll see if White can really stand out and not lose too much time to Dan Vogelbach or Austin Nola, while Mountcastle will reportedly come up after roughly two months -- when the Super Two deadline is in the rear-view mirror. As a general drafting rule, I try not to "stash" too many guys that are months away, but Mountcastle did hit .312 with 25 homers in 553 Triple-A PAs as a 22-year-old last year. With an early NFBC ADP of ~410, you're paying nothing to find out and that's still only in deep leagues with 400-plus picks available to them.

Oh, and Travis Shaw isn't on the table because he doesn't qualify at 1B yet, but Toronto likely plans to slide him there to take over for Justin Smoak. Shaw recently blamed 2019's struggles on a swing change that failed to take, and given his back-to-back seasons of 30-plus homers in 2017 and '18, I'm inclined to take a flyer.

More 2020 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

Kyle Tucker

Played Through Hairline Fracture in Hand, Now Healthy
Landen Roupp

Carted Off With Apparent Knee Injury
Devaughn Vele

Traded to Saints
Demarcus Robinson

Issued Three-Game Suspension
Lamar Jackson

Dealing With Minor Foot Injury
Lamar Jackson

Suffers Apparent Hand Injury
Félix Bautista

Felix Bautista has Surgery on Torn Rotator Cuff
Hideki Matsuyama

Looks to Bounce Back at Tour Championship
Corey Conners

Looking to Reverse Struggles at East Lake
Joe Mixon

Could Begin Season on PUP List
Cameron Young

Stays Hot Ahead of Tour Championship
Harris English

Aims for Complete Game at East Lake
Sepp Straka

Back in Action at East Lake
Ben Griffin

a Strong Value Play at East Lake
Bubba Chandler

to Join Pirates on Friday
Rory McIlroy

Chasing Another Win at East Lake
Patrick Cantlay

Finishes Tied for 30th at BMW Championship
Ludvig Aberg

Finishes Tied For Seventh at BMW Championship
Collin Morikawa

Finishes Tied for 33rd at BMW Championship
Keegan Bradley

Finishes Tied for 17th at BMW Championship
Robert MacIntyre

Finishes Second at BMW Championship
J.J. Spaun

Finishes Tied for 23rd at BMW Championship
Scottie Scheffler

Wins BMW Championship
Brian Robinson Jr.

Not Expected to Play for Commanders This Year
Kenley Jansen

Considered Day-to-Day With a "Physical" Injury
Rashee Rice

Could be Facing 4-6 Game Suspension?
Harry Hall

Hot at the Right Time for Tour Championship
PGA

Sungjae Im Wants to Rebound at Tour Championship
Jacob Bridgeman

has One Weakness Heading to Atlanta
Nikola Vučević

Nikola Vucevic Not Expecting to Be Moved Before the Season
Nick Taylor

a Long Shot to Win Tour Championship
Josh Giddey

Bulls Not Interested in Sign-and-Trade Deal Involving Josh Giddey
Brian Harman

Trying to Crack Top 20 at Tour Championship
Andrew Novak

Attempts to Bounce Back in Atlanta
Oscar Tshiebwe

Signs New Two-Way Deal With Jazz
Justin Rose

Seeks Even More Success at Tour Championship
Washington Wizards

Alondes Williams Joins Wizards for Training Camp
Washington Wizards

Wizards Add Skal Labissiere for Training Camp
Francisco Alvarez

Needs Thumb Surgery, May Play Through Injury
Willy Adames

Out With Side Soreness on Tuesday
A.J. Brown

on Track to Play in Week 1
Jacob deGrom

Being Skipped in Rotation Due to Shoulder Fatigue
Adley Rutschman

Scratched on Tuesday With Abdominal Discomfort
CBJ

Brendan Smith Joins Blue Jackets on Tryout Deal
STL

Milan Lucic Joins Blues for Tryout
DET

Red Wings Pick Up Travis Hamonic
Austin Riley

Doesn't Appear Ready to Return Any Time Soon
Aaron Judge

Unikely to Throw Normally Again This Year
Jalen McMillan

Could be Out Through Week 9 Bye
Indiana Pacers

Pacers Coach Rick Carlisle Agrees to a Multiyear Contract Extension on Tuesday
Washington Wizards

John Wall Retires After 11 NBA Seasons
Daniel Jones

Named as Colts Starting Quarterback
Jalen McMillan

Will Not Be Ready for Season Opener
Collin Sexton

Hornets Have High Hopes for Collin Sexton
Rui Hachimura

Likely to Start Season Without Contract Extension
Jaime Jaquez Jr.

Hopes to Bounce Back in 2025-26
Stephen Curry

Ready to Go for New Season
Orlando Magic

Lester Quinones Agrees to Deal With Magic
Luka Dončić

Luka Doncic Cleared to Play on Tuesday Night
Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

Pulled With Hamstring Tightness
MLB

Game 2 of Brewers-Cubs on Monday Postponed
Bryce Miller

to be Activated on Tuesday
Kyle Tucker

to Get Multiple Days Off
Shane Bieber

to Make Season Debut on Friday
Joe Mixon

Could Start Season on NFI List
Zack Wheeler

has Surgery to Remove Blood Clot
De'Von Achane

Unlikely to Practice This Week
Justin Jefferson

Returning to Practice
Chris Godwin

Bucs Chris Godwin Likely to Start Season on PUP List
Joe Flacco

Browns Name Joe Flacco as Their Week 1 Starter
Jalen McDaniels

Inks Deal With New Orleans
N'Faly Dante

Signs Deal With Hawks
Matthew Stafford

Practicing on Monday
Dru Smith

Agrees to Deal With Heat
Austin Dillon

Scores an Upset Victory at Richmond
William Byron

Clinches the Regular Season Championship Title at Richmond
Denny Hamlin

Pit-Road Struggles Impede Denny Hamlin's Chances of a Top Finish at Richmond
Joey Logano

Earns A Fourth-Place Finish at Richmond
Kyle Larson

Rallies to A Top-10 Finish at Richmond
Malik Nabers

Dealing With Back Injury
Khamzat Chimaev

Is The New UFC Middleweight Champion
Dricus Du Plessis

Gets Dominated At UFC 319
Aaron Pico

Suffers Knockout Loss In His UFC Debut
Lerone Murphy

Scores Stunning First-Round Knockout
Leodalis De Vries

Earns Promotion to Double-A
Nathaniel Lowe

Finalizing Deal with Boston
Geoff Neal

Suffers First-Round Knockout Loss
Ketel Marte

Arizona Could Trade Ketel Marte in the Offseason
Carlos Prates

Gets Back In The Win Column
Michael Page

Dominates At UFC 319
Jared Cannonier

Gets Outclassed
Tim Elliott

Gets Submission Win
Kai Asakura

Still Winless In The UFC
Austin Cindric

has Arguably his Best Run of the Season at Richmond
Ryan Blaney

Contends for First Richmond Win but Comes Up Short
Alex Bowman

Finishes Second but Loses Ground in Playoffs
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace Sets Personal Laps-Led Record at Richmond
Chris Buescher

Falls Out of Playoffs After Miserable Richmond Run
Coby White

Bulls Not Interested in Trading Coby White
Dereck Lively II

Expected to be Ready for Camp
Brian Robinson Jr.

Commanders "Shopping" Brian Robinson Jr.
John Metchie III

Texans Trade John Metchie III to Eagles
Victor Scott II

Placed on 10-Day Injured List
Trey Hendrickson

Bengals Listening to Trade Offers for Trey Hendrickson
Luka Dončić

Luka Doncic Likely Avoids Serious Injury
Denny Hamlin

the Heavy Favorite to Win at Richmond
Christopher Bell

Has Been Great at Richmond
Tyrese Haliburton

No Longer Using a Scooter, Crutches
Ryan Blaney

Can Ryan Blaney Finally Break Through at Richmond?
Joey Logano

Will Start Last at Richmond After Practice Trouble
Chase Elliott

Lack of Top-Line Speed Hurts his DFS Potential
Kyle Larson

Recent String of Crashes Make Him a Big Risk at Richmond
William Byron

Probably Slightly Too Inconsistent at Richmond to Start for DFS
Ryan Preece

on Pole at Richmond as Playoff Deadline Looms Closer
Brad Keselowski

Probably the Best RFK Racing DFS Option at Richmond
Chase Briscoe

Still Figuring Out Richmond
Chris Buescher

a Solid Choice for DFS Play, but Teammates Look Faster
Haywood Highsmith

Dealt to Brooklyn on Friday
Khamzat Chimaev

A Favorite At UFC 319
Dricus Du Plessis

Set For His Third Title Defense
Aaron Pico

Set For UFC Debut
Lerone Murphy

Looks To Remain Undefeated
Geoff Neal

Looks For His Second Win In A Row
Michael Page

Set For His Second Middleweight Bout
Jared Cannonier

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Kai Asakura

Looks For His First UFC Win
Tim Elliott

Set To Open Up UFC 309 Main Card
CBJ

Mikael Pyyhtia Re-Signs With Blue Jackets for One Year
UTA

Caleb Desnoyers Expected to Miss 12 Weeks After Wrist Procedure
Tyson Foerster

on Track to Be Healthy for Season Opener
NHL

Olivier Rodrigue Signs KHL Deal
NHL

Emil Bemstrom to Join Swiss Team

RANKINGS

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