🖥 TAP TO SAVE 30% WITH CODE NEW
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

Eric Cross' Top 10 Second Base (2B) Dynasty Fantasy Baseball Rankings for 2026

Jazz Chisholm - Fantasy Baseball Rankings, MLB Injury News, DFS and Betting Picks

Eric's top second base (2B) dynasty fantasy baseball rankings, risers, and breakouts heading into 2026. His updated second base rankings for fantasy baseball dynasty leagues.

The second base position isn't the most appealing position in the game, but there are some reinforcements on the way in the prospect ranks, and some potential bounceback and/or breakout candidates could really save this position.

Below, you'll find my top-10 at this position, along with analysis on each player. A few players whom I didn't include may also qualify for this position in your league, depending on your league's games played requirements. Those players have a note indicating where they would slot for me.

For my entire top 75 and additional writeups, check out my Patreon. Make sure to continue checking RotoBaller as I'm going to be going through all positions in the coming weeks!

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

 

Second Base Dynasty Rankings for Fantasy Baseball

Age in parentheses

1. Jazz Chisholm Jr., New York Yankees (27)

Without question, the most exciting player at this second base position right now is Jazz Chisholm Jr. After playing some outfield and third base, Chisholm has settled in at the keystone for the New York Yankees, although he will have third base eligibility for the 2026 season at least.

After a 24/40 season in 2024, Chisholm joined the 30/30 club in 2025 with 31 home runs and 31 stolen bases to go along with 75 runs, 80 RBI, and a .242/.332/.481 slash line. Ketel Marte might be the safer guy right now, but nobody at this position has more upside for fantasy than Chisholm does.

Some positives for Chisholm in 2025 were a career-best 10.9% walk rate, along with his barrel rate jumping from 9.7% in 2024 to 15% in 2025, to pair with a solid 43.3% hard-hit rate. It also helps that he has an elite 24.5% pull air rate, which, as a left-handed hitter in Yankee Stadium, is a beautiful thing.

On the flip side, Chisholm ran a below-average 75% zone and 67.8% overall contact rate, so despite the fun HR/SB potential, he's probably never going to provide a high AVG. He also shouldn't kill you in AVG and OBP either.

2. Ketel Marte, Arizona Diamondbacks (32)

A 32-year-old being second in these rankings is both a testament to how good Marte is and also how questionable this position is, especially at the top. Marte has been one of the gold standards at this position for the last half-decade or so and is coming off another good season in 2025, where he slashed .283/.376/.517 with 28 home runs in 126 games.

Marte has now hit at least .276 in six of his last seven seasons and has amassed at least 87 runs, 25 home runs, 72 RBI, and 64 walks in each of his last three seasons.

None of Marte's metrics is falling off yet, either. While his hard-hit rate and barrel rate dipped after 2024's career-best marks, he actually had the best barrel rate of his career at 13.5% while continuing to post above-average contact metrics and an elite approach, which led to an 11% walk rate, 14.9% strikeout rate, and 24.7% chase rate.

You'll need to bank in some time missed as Marte has missed at least 25 games in four of his last five seasons, but he remains one of the elite, top-tier options at this weak second base position.

3. Brice Turang, Milwaukee Brewers (26)

Even the biggest Brice Turang supporter couldn't have predicted the season we just saw. After hitting 13 home runs combined in 1,067 plate appearances in 2023 and 2024, Turang broke out with 18 home runs in 2025 to go along with 24 steals, 97 runs scored, 81 RBI, and a .288/.359/.435 slash line last season.

With any breakout of this magnitude, everyone is going to question the legitimacy. And when looking at the profile, I believe Turang's breakout can be sustained moving forward, or close to it. But on one condition...

The quality of contact gains needs to stick.

In both 2023 and 2024, Turang had a barrel rate under 3%, an AVG EV of 87 mph or less, and a hard-hit rate under 30%. But in 2025, those metrics jumped to 7.9%, 91.1 mph, and 47.4% respectively. In turn, Turang's SLG jumped 86 points, and his xSLG jumped 101 points. He also had a .406 xwOBACON in 2025, which was up from .305 in 2023 and .322 in 2024. It also helped that Turang's air rate rose from 46.3% to 53.1%.

Can Turang maintain this quality of contact gains moving forward? That's tough to say, but even if he regresses so that some middle ground between 2024 and 2025, he should at least be able to stay in the 12-15 homer range in 2026. I wouldn't bank on another rise from his 18 homers in 2025, though, as he needed a 10-homer month in August to get to 18 dingers this past season.

While Turang's power metrics increased drastically, he did sacrifice a bit of contact in the process. Turang went from a 90.8% zone and 86.2% overall contact rate in 2024 to 84.5% zone and 79% overall in 2025. Those are still above-average metrics, though, and no reason for concern. Turang also dropped his chase rate from 28.4% to 23.8% which is positive.

All in all, I believe Turang settles in somewhere between his 2024 and 2025 metrics. If that's indeed the case, he would still be a top-5 option for the next few years at this position due to the lack of elite depth at the top of second base rankings, in addition to the speed that Turang also provides.

Rankings Note: Maikel Garcia would slot here if eligible in your league, but he will be ranked/discussed in my Third Base rankings article.

4. Luke Keaschall, Minnesota Twins (23)

While he didn't grab enough Major League at-bats to finish high in the American League Rookie of the Year chase, Luke Keaschall was absolutely one of the most impressive rookies of the 2025 season.

In 207 plate appearances, Keaschall slashed .302/.382/.445 with 25 runs, 28 RBI, 14 doubles, four home runs, and 14 steals. That's a 650 PA pace of 79 runs, 13 home runs, 88 RBI, and 44 steals. Not too shabby for a rookie. In fact, only Nick Kurtz and Roman Anthony had a higher wRC+ than Keaschall for rookies with at least 200 plate appearances in 2025.

When you pop the hood on Keaschall's profile, there's plenty to be excited about as well. Right away, Keaschall demonstrated that he can be one of the better contact/approach bats in baseball. Keaschall posted an 86.7% zone and 81.5% overall contact rate with Minnesota, along with a 20% chase rate, 9.2% walk rate, and 14% strikeout rate.

For rookies with at least 200 plate appearances in 2025, Keaschall had the sixth-lowest strikeout rate, the ninth-best contact rate, and the third-lowest chase rate. This is exactly the type of contact/approach profile that Keaschall projected to have when he was a prospect, so it's encouraging to see these skills translate immediately upon his promotion to the Major Leagues.

While Keaschall isn't what I'd call a burner, he's a plus runner who had an 85th percentile sprint speed with Minnesota while swiping 14 bags in 17 attempts (82.4%). This comes after Keaschall had 11 steals in 28 Triple-A games before his promotion and 23 in 103 games back in 2024. He should be considered an annual threat for 30 or more steals moving forward.

As for his power, Keaschall is more of a fringe-average power bat, but he definitely should provide something constructive in the power department. With Minnesota, Keaschall's quality of contact metrics didn't stand out with an 86.2 mph AVG EV, 5.2% barrel rate, and 31.2% hard-hit rate, but his Sweet-Spot and Squared-Up rates were both above-average. Long-term, he could settle in as a 12-15 homer bat, maybe getting into the upper teens some years.

While he might never reach Tier-1 status at this position, Keaschall's all-around offensive profile is certainly fantasy-friendly and could have him well inside the top-10 second basemen for years to come.

5. Jackson Holliday, Baltimore Orioles (22)

After Jackson Holliday's first full season, is it fair to say he's slightly underwhelmed when compared to expectations? But were expectations set too high due to him being a #1 pick and a second-generation player? Perhaps. At the same time, what he did as a 21-year-old is still pretty solid. We have to remember that Holliday played the entire season at 21 years old and was younger than some of the players who just got drafted in July.

In 649 plate appearances, Holliday slashed .242/.314/.375 with 70 runs, 17 home runs, 55 RBI, and 17 steals, but was also caught 11 times, which was the second highest in all of baseball, trailing only Chandler Simpson, who had 12. For players with at least 20 stolen base attempts, only Jacob Young had a lower success rate stealing bases than Holliday's 60.7% mark.

So while Holliday has an 85th percentile sprint speed, he really needs to improve his efficiency, or he's not going to get the green light to steal as often moving forward.

At the plate, Holliday made some positive gains in 2025, which has me encouraged for 2026. First and foremost, Holliday got his strikeout rate back in check at 21.6% after having a whopping 33.2% strikeout rate in 208 plate appearances as a rookie in 2024. He also improved his walk rate from 7.2% to 8.6%.

Two other big gains from Holliday were his major jumps in zone and overall contact rate. After having a 75.7% zone and 65.9% overall contact rate in 2024, Holliday improved those metrics to 81.6% and 75.5% respectively, both of which are around league-average. Holliday also dropped his chase rate from 27.2% to 22.3%.

Holliday struggled against left-handed pitching in 2025, slashing .200/.263/.309 with a 62 wRC+ and 86 mph AVG EV against them. While this is a concern, Holliday is still very young, and Baltimore seems to be willing to give him opportunities to figure it out instead of platooning him. If the struggles continue, Baltimore's approach could shift, though.

Holliday's overall quality of contact, especially against right-handed pitching, was decent. Holliday had an 89.8 mph AVG EV, 44.6% hard-hit rate, and a 9.3% barrel rate against right-handed pitchers and an 88.8 mph AVG EV, 40.8% hard-hit rate, and 7.8% barrel rate overall. While I don't expect many 25-homer seasons, Holliday should be able to approach or exceed 20 home runs annually.

All in all, I do believe Holliday is going to be a solid fantasy asset, just not a high-impact one. He's a mid to back-end top-10 second baseman for me.

Rankings Note: Jordan Westburg would slot here, but he will be ranked/discussed in my Third Base rankings article.

6. J.J. Wetherholt, St. Louis Cardinals (23)

While JJ Wetherholt played the most at shortstop in 2025, the most likely scenario is him playing second base or third base long-term for the St. Louis Cardinals, as they're unlikely to move Masyn Winn off of the position. Regardless of what positional eligibility Wetherholt winds up having, his all-around offensive profile will fit just fine.

In 109 games between Double-A and Triple-A this past season, Wetherholt slashed .306/.421/.510 with 28 doubles, 17 home runs, and 23 steals while only getting caught three times. He also recorded a phenomenal 14.5% walk rate and 14.7% strikeout rate across 496 plate appearances.

Wetherholt blends above-average speed with above-average contact skills, plus or better swing decisions, and above-average power as well. He put up a 49% hard-hit rate, 12.6% barrel rate, and a 91.4 mph AVG EV in Triple-A while having a contact rate around 80% for the entire 2025 season. Wetherholt should debut early in 2026 for St. Louis and could make a strong run at National League Rookie of the Year.

7. Ozzie Albies, Atlanta Braves (28)

It's hard to figure out if we should be in or out on Ozzie Albies right now. After having arguably the best year of his career in 2023, Albies has had maybe the worst two years of his career in 2024 and 2025. Albies slashed .251/.303/.404 in 99 games in 2024 and then .240/.306/.365 with 16 home runs and 14 steals in 157 games last season. Thankfully, Albies ended the season on a positive note, slashing .272/.330/.439 after the All-Star break, after slashing .220/.290/.316 before the All-Star break.

When you look at Albies' quality of contact metrics, he's never stood out, but he did dip from an 8.2% barrel rate, 88.7 mph AVG EV, and 39% hard-hit rate in 2023 down to 4.9%, 87.5 mph AVG EV, and a 30.7% hard-hit rate in 2025.

Albies has always gotten by on elite batted ball angles, headlined by a 27.2% pull air rate. Albies still has above-average zone and overall contact rates, as well as a low 14.1% strikeout rate. I'm not sure Albies returns to his top-5 ways or even gets back to 20 home runs, but he could settle in as a back-end top-10 option until some of these prospects push him out.

8. Luis Pena, Milwaukee Brewers (19)

While Luis Peña played three different infield spots in 2025, starting 45 games at shortstop, 27 games at second base, and 10 at third base. Even though I believe he has the arm to play short or third, I'm projecting him more as a second baseman, given all of Milwaukee's other options on the left side of the infield.

In 2025, Peña had 44 steals in 96 games with a .270/.335/.422 slash line, 33 extra base hits, and nine home runs. There's easy plus or better speed in the profile, along with above-average contact skills. Peña finished 2025 with a 76% contact rate, 8.1% walk rate, and a 16.3% strikeout rate, while being 18 years old for the entire season in Low-A and High-A.

But while the contact skills and speed are exciting, Peña's long-term value and fantasy impact hinge on how much power he ultimately provides. Peña is currently a fringe-average power bat who projects as a 12-15 home run hitter long-term. But if he can add more bulk and power moving forward and tick up to a 15-20 homer bat, Peña could wind up as an impact second baseman for fantasy purposes.

9. Travis Bazzana, Cleveland Guardians (23)

A pair of oblique strains limited the 2024 #1 overall pick to 84 games this past season, but Bazzana was still solid in those 84 games. Sure, he hit only .245, but that came with a .289 OBP, .179 ISO, 31 extra-base hits, nine home runs, and 14 steals. Bazzana still managed to push a .400 OBP despite having a low average, thanks to a lofty 17.6% walk rate, which ticked up to 24.2% in his 26 Triple-A games. Overall, Bazzana still finished 2025 with an impressive 136 wRC+.

When you combine contact and approach, there aren't many prospects with a better combination of those two tools than Bazzana. In 2025, Bazzana posted an 80% contact rate, 7.5% SwStr rate, and the aforementioned 17.6% walk rate. There's also an above-average power and speed in Bazzana's profile, and he posted a solid 89.3 mph AVG EV, 41.1% hard-hit rate, and 12.5% barrel rate in Triple-A.

You shouldn't be scared away by the lower average last season. The skills are here for Bazzana to be a five-category fantasy contributor, and one who should debut for Cleveland early in the 2026 season.

10. Nico Hoerner, Chicago Cubs (28)

At this point, you should know that to expect with Nico Hoerner every year and expecting anything different is rather silly, to be honest. In each of Hoerner's four full Major League seasons, he's been between seven and 10 home runs with under 70 RBI and an AVG north of .270. In each of the last three seasons, Hoerner has scored at least 86 runs with at least 29 stolen bases. Hoerner is a good three-category contributor. Take it to the bank.

Hoerner posted a career-best 7.6% strikeout rate in 2025 with a 94.9% zone contact rate and 88.8% overall contact rate. Those were all near the top of the league in each category. He also had an 82nd percentile sprint speed. You can pencil him in for 80 runs, 25 steals, and a .270 average. That might not be sexy, but Hoerner is stable, steady, and provides solid value for fantasy.

If you enjoyed these rankings and want to see additional rankings, analysis, and more, check out Eric's Toolshed Fantasy Patreon.

More Fantasy Baseball Advice



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!






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

Darius Garland

Exits Early Wednesday With Foot Injury
Jalen Suggs

to Miss Sixth Straight Game Thursday
Wendell Carter Jr.

Cleared to Play in Berlin
Myles Turner

Available Thursday
Deni Avdija

Likely to Remain Out Thursday
Jaylen Brown

Ready to Face Heat Thursday
Bruce Brown

Spencer Jones, Bruce Brown Available Wednesday
Aaron Gordon

Cleared for Wednesday Night
Jamal Murray

Active Wednesday Night
Cade Cunningham

Ready to End Two-Game Absence
Devin Booker

Questionable for Thursday Night
Giannis Antetokounmpo

Probable to Face Spurs
Brandon Williams

Available Wednesday
Max Christie

Out Wednesday
P.J. Washington

Returns to Action Wednesday
Scotty Pippen Jr.

Season Debut Delayed for at Least Four More Weeks
Brandon Clarke

to Miss 4-6 More Weeks
Josh Giddey

Starting Ramp-Up Period, Could Return Soon
Ja Morant

Unavailable Thursday
Julian Phillips

Out Wednesday
Coby White

to Be Limited to 28-30 Minutes Wednesday
Mackenzie Blackwood

Activated From Injured Reserve
Ben Griffin

Looks To Stay Hot In 2026
Tom Wilson

Cleared for Contact, Could Return Thursday
Neal Pionk

Lands on Injured Reserve, Out Week-to-Week
Jamie Drysdale

Activated From Injured Reserve
Corey Perry

Unavailable Wednesday
Teuvo Teravainen

to Miss at Least One Game
Connor Bedard

Returns to Practice
Alexandre Texier

Canadiens Sign Alexandre Texier to Two-Year Extension
New York Giants

Giants Making "Massive Push" to Hire John Harbaugh on Wednesday
Ranger Suárez

Ranger Suarez Agrees to Five-Year Deal With Red Sox
CFB

Dante Moore Not Entering 2026 NFL Draft, Will Return to Oregon
NFL

Mike Tomlin Doesn't Plan to Coach in 2026
Travis Hunter

Expected to Play More Defense in 2026
CFB

FBS Coaches Unanimously Vote to Expand Redshirt Eligibility to Nine Games
CFB

Ohio State Transfer Mylan Graham Signs with Notre Dame
CFB

Caden Durham Withdraws from Transfer Portal, Will Stay at LSU
Leon Draisaitl

Has Three Points in Tuesday's Loss
Joel Hofer

Controls Hurricanes Tuesday
Jordan Spieth

Perhaps the Most Intriguing Player at Sony Open
Jeremy Swayman

Posts First Shutout of the Season
Zach Werenski

Totals Three Points in Tuesday's Win
Chandler Stephenson

Available Wednesday
Aaron Rai

Looking For Putting Confidence at Waialae Country Club
Jonathan Marchessault

Moved to Injured Reserve
Brayden Point

Labeled Week-to-Week
Collin Morikawa

Isn't The Safe Play He Used to Be Ahead of Sony Open
Kurt Kitayama

Needs His Putting to Turn Around For Success at Year's First Event
Ryan Weathers

Yankees Add Rotation Depth, Acquire Ryan Weathers in Four-Player Deal
Robert Thomas

Out Tuesday
Jake Walman

Available Against Predators
Troy Terry

a Game-Time Decision Tuesday
Justin Sourdif

Won't Play Tuesday
Jakob Chychrun

a Game-Time Call Tuesday
Morgan Geekie

Available Tuesday
Los Angeles Chargers

Chargers Fire Offensive Coordinator Greg Roman
Pittsburgh Steelers

Mike Tomlin Stepping Down as Steelers Head Coach
CFB

Georgia Tech the Favorite to Land Justice Haynes?
Nolan Arenado

Cardinals Trade Nolan Arenado to Diamondbacks
Tom Kim

Desperately Needs a Solid Week at Sony Open
Billy Horschel

Hoping For a Fast Start to New Season at Sony Open
Corey Conners

Looks to Have a Return to Form in 2026
PGA

Chris Gotterup a Decent Play at Sony Open
Gary Woodland

Could Prosper at the Sony Open
Keith Mitchell

Unlikely to Contend at Sony Open
Robert MacIntyre

Looking for a Good Performance at the Sony Open
Michael Kim

Hopes to Start Sony Open Better This Week
Tom Hoge

Tries to Erase Poor 2025 Second Half in Hawaii
Brian Harman

Seeks Fresh Start in Hawaii
Eric Cole

Looks to Last Year for Success at Sony Open
Daniel Berger

Starts Off 2026 at Sony Open
Nico Collins

Suffers Concussion Against Steelers
Nico Collins

Carted to Locker Room for Concussion Evaluation
Kyle Tucker

Mets Meet With Kyle Tucker
Dalton Kincaid

"Should be Fine" for Divisional Round
Brooks Koepka

Officially Returning To PGA Tour
Tucker Kraft

Hopes to be Ready for Week 1 of Next Season
CFB

Georgia Lands Kentucky Transfer Dante Dowdell
Matthew Stafford

has "Little Sprain," Should be "Good to Go"
CFB

Sam Leavitt Expected to Sign with LSU
Green Bay Packers

Packers Expected to Work Out New Deal With Matt LaFleur in the "Coming Days"
CFB

Dylan Raiola Commits to Oregon
CFB

Isaiah Horton Landing with Texas A&M
George Kittle

Suffers Torn Achilles on Sunday
Omarion Hampton

Active for Wild-Card Round Against Patriots
George Kittle

Ruled Out After Non-Contact Achilles Injury
Las Vegas Raiders

Raiders Request Interview With Ejiro Evero
Los Angeles Rams

Mike LaFleur to Interview With Raiders and Cardinals
Aaron Rodgers

Steelers Open to Re-Signing Aaron Rodgers?
Matthew Stafford

X-Rays Come Back Negative
MacKenzie Gore

Yankees Pursuing Trade for MacKenzie Gore
Alex Bregman

Cubs Sign Alex Bregman to Five-Year, $175 Millon Contract
Freddie Freeman

Withdraws from World Baseball Classic
Max Kepler

Receives 80-Game PED Suspension
CFB

Cam Coleman Visiting Alabama on Friday
Omarion Hampton

Expects to Play Sunday Night
CFB

Eric Singleton Jr. Enters Transfer Portal, Trending to Land at Florida
CFB

NCAA Denies Trinidad Chambliss a Sixth Year of Eligibility
Omarion Hampton

Questionable for Wild-Card Weekend
Kyle Tucker

Mets Remain in Mix for Kyle Tucker
Ketel Marte

Will Remain With Diamondbacks
Rashee Rice

to be Reviewed Under League's Conduct Policy

RANKINGS

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