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 Shane Smith, Stephen Kolek, Lucas Giolito

Stephen Kolek - Fantasy Baseball Rankings, Draft Sleepers, MLB Injury News

Elliott looks at pitchers with surprising starts recently. These SPs could emerge as fantasy baseball waiver wire targets for Week 7 in 2025, or just mirages.

Welcome back to the "Are You For Real?" series as we dive into Week 7 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 some exciting arms to look at this week! First, we'll look at Shane Smith's strong start against Miami. Then, we'll deep dive into Stephen Kolek's complete-game shutout in Coors Field on Saturday. We'll finish it off by breaking down the possible resurgence of Lucas Giolito in Boston.

Roster percentages are taken from Yahoo! and are accurate as of May 12.

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

 

Shane Smith, Chicago White Sox

26% Rostered

2025 Stats (prior to this start): 37 1/3 IP, 2.41 ERA, 3.41 FIP, 10.3% K-BB%

5/10 vs. MIA: 6 IP, 4 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 7 K

Smith has been rolling as of late and put up his best start of the season on Saturday against Miami. Smith blanked the fish for six innings while striking out seven in a tough no-decision. Smith now has a sparkling 2.08 ERA on the year, and has plenty of fantasy managers wondering if there’s any value to be had with this south-sider.

Originally an undrafted prospect, Smith came up through the Brewers’ system before being selected in the Rule 5 draft by Chicago ahead of the 2025 season. A well-built 6-foot-3 right-hander, Smith works with a five-pitch mix consisting of a four-seam fastball, changeup, slider, curveball, and sinker.

He was on fire against Miami with his stuff, racking up a whopping 17 whiffs on 87 pitches. He primarily earned those whiffs with two pitches, the four-seamer and the changeup.

Let’s start with Smith’s changeup, which has been downright nasty for him this season. On the year, opponents are hitting just .143 with a .200 SLG and .231 wOBA off Smith’s changeup, along with an impressive 34.7% whiff rate. Smith notched six of his 17 whiffs with the pitch in this start.

A 90.1 mph offering, Smith’s changeup is characterized by extreme vertical drop and a low 1,613 RPM spin rate.

It looks rather filthy, and I think Smith’s changeup has the makings of a strikeout pitch. In addition to the poor outcomes against the pitch, batters also have a 16% swinging-strike rate and a 29.8% chase rate against Smith’s changeup this season. Smith’s changeup was often viewed as his best pitch coming up, and that bears out in the numbers.

Smith routinely had strikeout rates better than 25% in the minors, and while he may not be able to maintain that number exactly, I do think he’s capable of putting up a better strikeout rate than his current 7.89 K/9 going forward. He does have a 26.4% strikeout rate over his last four starts, along with an 18.4% K-BB% and a 2.07 FIP.

Changeup leading the way, Smith has been rolling lately.

Then there’s his fastball, which Smith throws decently hard at 95 mph on average, with the ability to touch 97. With a slightly below average drop and break, Smith tends to live up to his four-seamer, targeting the middle and upper parts of the zone. The Marlins were chasing high heat all day in this game, and Smith earned nine of his 17 whiffs on the fastball in this start.

Opponents have really struggled against Smith’s fastball this season, hitting just .194 with a .274 SLG and .268 wOBA.

Smith has excelled by limiting hard contact and keeping the ball in the air. He has an 88.1 mph average exit velocity against his four-seamer this season, along with a 23-degree average launch angle. Batters have really struggled to square Smith’s fastball up, posting a 51.1% flyball rate compared to just a 14.9% line drive rate.

Flyballs are the most likely batted ball type to go for a home run or extra bases, but flyballs are also the least likely batted ball type to fall for a hit. If it’s not out or over the outfielder’s head, it tends to be caught. Therefore, it can actually be seen as a positive for Smith to allow all these flyballs, as he’s limiting hits and baserunners against himself.

The obvious fear when it comes to an approach like this is home runs, but Smith has done an excellent job of limiting the long ball thus far. He’s allowed one, yes, just one, home run all season and has an impressive 0.21 HR/9. Of course, there’s no way Smith sustains an HR/9 that low all season, but this is something Smith has excelled at throughout his minor league career.

He’s regularly had HR/9 rates below 1.00, and I think limiting home runs is something Smith could be capable of at the major league level. He’s shown us as much so far, and even when the 2.3% HR/FB ratio regresses, he should have a solid home run rate. He does pitch home games in a hitter-friendly ballpark, which is a little scary, but again, Smith has shown us he can limit the long ball.

Then, of course, there’s the luck factor. Smith has pitched well, especially recently, but Lady Luck has been on his side throughout. In addition to the unsustainably low 2.3% HR/FB rate, Smith also has a .263 BABIP and 79.1% LOB rate against on the year. These aren’t egregiously lucky numbers or anything, but they likely will regress, and Smith’s 2.08 ERA will rise when that happens.

I don’t know if it’ll regress all the way to 4.15 like his xFIP suggests, but regression will come for Smith.

The last concerning factor for Smith just happens to be the team he plays for. Yes, we’ve seen pitchers like Garrett Crochet last season transcend their awful surroundings for a strong fantasy year, but Smith is not Crochet. He does have what it takes to be a useful fantasy arm with some strikeout upside thanks to that changeup, but you can rarely expect a win or even major league caliber defense behind him on any given day.

This shouldn’t scare anyone off Smith completely, but you do sort of wish he were on a different team (not the Rockies).

Verdict:

The White Sox may have something in their Rule 5 draft pick this year. Smith throws hard and limits hard contact with his fastball, leading to strong outcomes, even if they’re inflated by an artificially low BABIP. His changeup is the jewel of the arsenal, and should be a pitch Smith can use to rack up whiffs and strikeouts.

Overall, I like what I see with Smith. The biggest drawbacks are the team he plays for and the good fortune that’s propelled his early-season success. Make no mistake, Smith has had good luck to get to his 2.08 ERA. Still, there’s enough here to make him worth an add in 12-team leagues or deeper.

He should be better in quality start leagues, seeing as he’ll rarely get wins on the White Sox.

 

Stephen Kolek, San Diego Padres

17% Rostered

2024 Stats (bullpen): 46 2/3 IP, 5.21 ERA, 3.57 FIP, 12.8% K-BB%

5/10 @ COL: 9 IP, 5 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 7 K

The Padres may’ve given Kolek 21 runs of support on Saturday, but that was 20 more runs than the right-hander needed. Kolek went the distance, tossing the rare complete game shutout en route to his second straight victory. Kolek has yet to allow a run in his first two starts of the season and seems to be filling in nicely at the back end of San Diego’s rotation.

He should at least have a job until Yu Darvish returns, but if Kolek continues to pitch well, he could carve out a permanent role for himself. Randy Vasquez’s spot in the rotation is hardly secure. Is there anything here with Kolek, or is he someone to ignore?

Originally an 11th-round draft pick by the Dodgers back in 2018, Kolek was never much of a prospect. He was traded from Los Angeles to Seattle for cash, and then selected by San Diego in the 2023 Rule 5 draft. Not much prospect pedigree, and his organization hardly seemed to think much of him.

Kolek works with a six-pitch mix consisting of a four-seam fastball, sinker, changeup, cutter, slider, and sweeper. He’s only thrown a handful of sweepers thus far, but he’s used all other pitches at least 10% of the time through two starts.

Kolek’s most-used pitch has been his four-seam fastball, and his second-most-used pitch has been the sinker. Together, he’s thrown the pitches a combined 60.7% of the time. Kolek averages 94.4 mph with his fastball and can touch 96. With below-average drop, break, and average spin, Kolek’s fastball doesn’t stand out from a measurables perspective.

One thing Kolek does well with the pitch is induce groundballs. Kolek had a 54.5% ground-ball rate with the pitch last season, and a 53.8% ground-ball rate with it thus far. Throughout his minor league career, whether as a starter or reliever, Kolek has routinely been a strong groundball pitcher, and his fastballs play a big part in that approach.

Batters have struggled against Kolek’s four-seamer thus far, hitting just .222 with a .278 SLG and .288 wOBA against, though Kolek has only made two starts. In addition to the four-seamer, Kolek’s sinker has proven to be an excellent groundball pitch as well. Kolek used his sinker a lot more out of the pen last season (41.2%) than as a starter this season (26.1%), but it has the makings of a great groundball offering.

Kolek has a plus drop with the pitch, which can cause hitters to swing over the pitch and into ground-ball outs. Kolek had a -3-degree average launch angle with the pitch last season and a -12-degree average launch angle against with the pitch this season. He also has a monster 83.3% ground-ball rate through two starts after posting a 63.5% ground-ball rate with the pitch last season.

Opponents are hitting .357 off the sinker thus far, but one would expect the .417 BABIP against the pitch to drop significantly over time.

So, Kolek is a good groundball guy with perfectly average velocity. What about his secondary stuff? His most prominent secondary offering may be the cutter, which he’s only thrown 10.1% of the time this season, but used 19.1% of the time last season. A 90.8 mph offering, Kolek’s cutter is characterized by rather average movement and spin.

Like a lot of cutters, it’s sort of a harder, less sweepy version of his slider.

The pitch does have the best whiff rate of any of Kolek’s pitches at 37.5%, but I’m not sure that’ll hold. He only had a 19.8% whiff rate with the pitch last season, and he only got one whiff with the pitch in this start despite throwing 104 pitches and 11 cutters. The two whiffs he got on three swings in the start before Saturday are likely juicing the numbers a bit.

When it comes to strikeouts, Kolek may be lacking, and that’s despite having a name that’s bookended by the letter K. Kolek only had an 18.5% strikeout rate last year while pitching out of the bullpen and throwing a full mph harder. The cutter isn’t a strong strikeout pitch, but neither are the rest of his secondary offerings.

He only has a double-digit swinging-strike rate with one pitch this season—the cutter—and he doesn’t have a single pitch with a swinging-strike rate higher than 11% for his career. Kolek did put up some better strikeout numbers in the minors, but I’m just not seeing it with his stuff. His stuff doesn’t seem to be able to miss bats at the major league level.

Verdict:

A CGSO is always impressive in 2025, even more so when it comes in Coors Field. Less so when the opponent is the Rockies, but an impressive outing from Kolek nonetheless. Kolek throws with mid-90s velocity and takes a ground-ball heavy approach. His four-seamer and especially sinker are great at inducing groundballs, and this is a skill that Kolek should possess, whether he’s working as a starter or reliever.

His secondary stuff leaves something to be desired, and Kolek does not possess the big strikeout upside we like to see in waiver wire arms. Even though this most recent start was terrific, we can’t expect nine innings or even him going past six with any regularity.

He’s a low-ceiling streamer on a good team that could snag him some wins, but there doesn’t seem to be another level here.

 

Lucas Giolito, Boston Red Sox

18% Rostered

2025 Stats (prior to this start): 9 2/3 IP, 8.38 ERA, 4.87 FIP, 13.3% K-BB%

5/11 @ KC: 6 2/3 IP, 2 H, 1 R (0 ER), 1 BB, 5 K

Giolito had his best start of the season on Sunday, allowing just one unearned run over six 2/3 innings while picking up his first win of the season. Giolito was once considered a fantasy asset, posting a 3.47 ERA. 3.54 FIP, and 22.7% K-BB% in 72 starts between 2019-2021, but injuries have derailed his career, and he’s pitching in his first action since 2023 this season.

Can Giolito return to past glory, or are those days long gone?

Originally a first-round pick by the Nationals back in 2012, Giolito was a huge prospect coming up. He was considered one of the best pitching prospects in all of baseball in the mid-2010s and was a key piece in the Adam Eaton trade between the Nationals and White Sox. Giolito works with a four-pitch mix consisting of a four-seam fastball, changeup, slider, and curveball. It’s a classic arsenal, and one that Giolito used to mow down the Royals on Sunday.

His most used pitch on Sunday is his most used pitch in general, the four-seam fastball. Giolito averaged 94 mph with his heater in this one, which is a big improvement because he averaged just 91.6 mph on the gun in his previous start against Texas, a start in which he was lit up for six runs on 10 hits in three 2/3 innings.

During his heyday of 2019-2021, Giolito averaged 94 mph with his four-seamer, so seeing the velocity tick back up is an encouraging sign. He also had a spin rate of 2264 RPM in this start, which is creeping back up towards his 2019-2021 levels. Giolito’s fastball averaged about 2300 RPM in those days, but he had just 2172 RPM with the pitch last season.

It’s nice to see the measurables improve on this pitch, and it suggests that Giolito is on the right track.

Giolito’s second-most-used pitch in this start is one that he hadn’t been throwing as often before Sunday, and that’s his slider. Giolito threw the slider 22% of the time against Kansas City, but has just a 9.9% usage rate on the year. While not his most dominant strikeout pitch (that would be the changeup), the slider played a key role in his past success.

Interestingly, the slider velocity is also up, going from 84 mph last season to 87.7 mph this season.

Giolito’s career mark is 84.5 mph, so this would represent a big jump in slider velocity for him. Giolito currently has a 20% swinging-strike rate and a 44.4% chase rate with his slider on the year. Those numbers likely won’t last, but Giolito does have a 16.3% career swinging-strike rate with the slider, and now it has a little extra juice. Giolito earned five of his 10 whiffs with the slider in this start, so hopefully the usage continues to trend upwards.

Giolito also featured his changeup prominently in this start, throwing it 19% of the time. Oddly enough, he failed to secure a single whiff with the pitch and has just a 7.9% swinging-strike rate with the pitch this season. Batters are hitting just .190 off the pitch with a 36.7% chase rate, so perhaps we can chalk this up to small sample size and odd pitch mix in his first two starts.

Giolito barely used his curveball or slider in his first two starts, which may’ve led to an overreliance on the changeup, especially against right-handed batters, where Giolito should feature his slider and curveball more often. The changeup was Giolito’s go-to out pitch against lefties, and he does like to use it against righties as well, but he needs the slider and curveball to round himself out and give himself a full arsenal.

He was effectively a two-pitch pitcher for his first two starts, which led to poor results.

Giolito looked cooked after posting a 4.89 ERA between 2022 and 2023, but he may not be done after all. There’s plenty of upside in this arm at least; we’re only two years removed from a 204-strikeout season from Giolito back in 2023. His velocity is up, and he’s begun mixing in his secondary stuff more often, which could lead to bigger strikeout numbers.

Even though it feels like he’s been around forever, Gioltio is only 30 and could have plenty left in the tank if healthy.

Verdict:

Giolito's velocity was back in this start and up on his secondary offerings, including a three-mph jump on his slider from 84 to 87 mph. Giolito featured his slider and curveball more prominently in this one, which is an excellent sign as he was operating as a two-pitch pitcher before Sunday.

The combination of a mid-90s fastball, juiced-up slider, and solid changeup should give Giolito plenty of strikeout upside. He is capable of better than his current 7.71 K/9 and could probably at least average one strikeout per inning.

There’s big blow-up potential here, as we saw in the start prior to this one, where Giolito surrendered six runs in three 2/3 innings. There are enough positives here to interest me, and I think Giolito is worth adding in 12-team leagues or deeper. However, I’m not sure I’m ready to put my ratios on the line in a roto or categories league.

Instead, I’d like to see another good start that continues these positive trends before trusting Giolito in my lineup.



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

Willson Contreras

Exits Early Tuesday With Right-Foot Bruise
Oneil Cruz

Leaves Tuesday's Game with Apparent Head Injury
Bradley Beal

Feeling Rejuvenated in Los Angeles
Frankie Montas

Moves to Bullpen, Hopes for Reset in Relief Role
Luka Dončić

Luka Doncic Looking "Incredible"
PIT

Chad Ruhwedel Retires From NHL
Ronald Acuña Jr.

Ronald Acuna Jr. to be Activated Soon
MIN

Jack Johnson Signs Tryout Deal with Wild
Ryker Evans

Kraken Extend Ryker Evans with Two-Year Deal
Josh Hader

Astros Place Josh Hader on Injured List With Shoulder Strain
Rondale Moore

Out for the Season With Knee Injury
Félix Bautista

Felix Bautista Won't Return This Year With "Significant" Shoulder Injury
Zach Eflin

to Undergo Back Surgery, Out for the Year
Christian Watson

Likely to Begin Season on PUP List
Jordan Love

Undergoes Procedure on Left Thumb
Bud Cauley

Needs a Big Result in Maryland
Harris English

Confident for BMW Championship
Jason Day

Faces Uphill Battle at BMW Championship
Cameron Young

Hot at the Right Time
J.J. Spaun

Rolls in After Near Miss in Memphis
Brian Harman

is a Longer Shot Heading to Maryland
Corey Conners

Appears Safe This Week in Maryland
Daniel Berger

Must Play Better at BMW Championship
Zach Neto

Homers Twice on Monday
Miami Heat

Kai Jones Works Out for Heat
Sacramento Kings

Russell Westbrook Likely to Join Kings
Golden State Warriors

Al Horford Expected to Sign with Warriors if He Doesn't Retire
Jonathan Kuminga

Reportedly Leaning Toward Accepting Golden State's Qualifying Offer
Cam Thomas

"Increasingly Interested" in Signing Qualifying Offer
Gustavo Campero

Carted Off Field Monday With Leg Injury
Josh Hader

Unavailable Monday Due To Shoulder Discomfort
Shane McClanahan

has Surgery, Won't Return in 2025
Sepp Straka

Withdraws From BMW Championship
Maverick McNealy

Finishes Tied for 28th at FedEx St. Jude Championship
Scottie Scheffler

Finishes Tied For Third at FedEx St. Jude Championship
Collin Morikawa

Finishes Tied For 22nd at FedEx St. Jude Championship
Rory McIlroy

Finishes Tied For Seventh at Open Championship
Ben Griffin

Finishes Tied For Ninth at FedEx St. Jude Championship
Tommy Fleetwood

Finishes Tied For Third at FedEx St. Jude Championship
Ludvig Aberg

Finishes Tied For Ninth at FedEx St. Jude Championship
Bobby Witt Jr.

Back in Monday's Lineup
Brandon Aiyuk

Could Return in Week 6
Boston Celtics

Miles Norris Waived by Celtics
Javonte Green

Inks Deal With Pistons
Anthony Hernandez

Extends His Win Streak To Eight
Roman Dolidze

Submitted At UFC Vegas 109
Byron Buxton

Twins Reinstate Byron Buxton From Injured List
Ode' Osbourne

Drops Decision At UFC Vegas 109
Steve Erceg

Gets Back In The Win Column
Angela Hill

Outclassed At UFC Vegas 109
Angela Hill

Iasmin Lucindo Dominates Angela Hill
Christian Rodriguez

Loses Back-To-Back Fights
Andre Fili

Gets Back in the Win Column
Miles Johns

Drops Split Decision At UFC Vegas 109
Miles Johns

Jean Matsumoto Edges Out Miles Johns To Win Split Decision
Eryk Anders

Suffers First-Round TKO
Christian Leroy Duncan

Scores First-Round TKO Win
Alexander Mattison

Will Miss Entire Season With Neck Injury
Zayne Parekh

Has Sights Set on Making Flames Roster
Hampus Lindholm

Fully Healthy for New Season
NHL

Nathan Bastian Joins Stars on One-Year Contract
Travis Bazzana

Set to Join Triple-A
Christopher Bell

Good Pit Strategy Helps Elevate Christopher Bell to Second
William Byron

Extends Championship Lead with Fourth-Place Finish
Ryan Blaney

Despite Finishing Sixth, Watkins Glen Might've Been Ryan Blaney's Best Road Race
Alex Bowman

Loses Ground Above Playoff Cutline, but Still Pretty Safe
Kyle Larson

Finishes Last After Brake Failure and Spin
Chris Buescher

Scores Another Top-5 Run At Watkins Glen
Ryan Preece

Earns Stage Points, but Loses Ground to the Playoffs At Watkins Glen
William Byron

Keeps the Regular Season Points Lead After Watkins Glen
Chase Briscoe

Continues His Hot Streak With A Top-5 Finish At Watkins Glen
Chase Elliott

Top-20 Streak Ends at Watkins Glen After Pit Struggles
Josh Giddey

Bulls Still Apart In Contract Negotiations
Jeremy Sochan

Expected To Miss EuroBasket With Calf Injury
Trae Young

'Resigned' To Idea Of No Extension This Offseason
Matthew Stafford

Will Return to Practice on Monday
Tyjae Spears

to Miss a Couple of Weeks
Hunter Greene

Expected to Return Wednesday
Bobby Witt Jr.

Dealing With Stiff Back
Rondale Moore

Expected to Miss Season
Shane Van Gisbergen

Shane van Gisbergen the Heavy Favorite to Win at Watkins Glen
Kyle Larson

Is Kyle Larson a Must-Play in DFS at Watkins Glen?
Chase Elliott

an Easy Pick to Make in DFS at Watkins Glen
Chris Buescher

Trying to Repeat at Watkins Glen
Tyler Reddick

Struggling to Find Speed at Watkins Glen
Michael McDowell

a Legitimate Threat at Watkins Glen
Joey Logano

Has Been Solid at Watkins Glen in Next Gen Car
Todd Gilliland

Has Upside at Watkins Glen
Ricky Stenhouse Jr

. has Favorable Watkins Glen Record
Justin Haley

Fastest in Practice at Watkins Glen
Riley Herbst

Could Be A Sneaky DFS Play
Julio Rodríguez

Julio Rodriguez Homers Twice in Win
Tyjae Spears

Picks Up High-Ankle Sprain in Loss
Jayden Reed

Wearing Walking Boot
Tyjae Spears

Carted Off on Saturday
New York Knicks

Ben Simmons Drawing Interest from Knicks, Celtics
Rachaad White

Won't Return on Saturday
James Cook

Not Willing to Play During Contract Dispute
Anthony Richardson Sr.

Plans to Practice Saturday
Trea Turner

Homers, Drives in Five in Productive Night
Haywood Highsmith

Undergoes Successful Knee Surgery
NHL

Jakub Vrana Signs Two-Year Deal in Sweden
COL

Avalanche Bring Back Joel Kiviranta on One-Year Deal
Matthew Tkachuk

Could Miss 2-3 Months with Surgery
Edward Cabrera

Punches Out 11 in Victory
Chase Burns

Superb in 10-Strikeout Performance
Chris Olave

Tweaks Ankle at Practice
Najee Harris

' Status for Week 1 Uncertain
Jake Ferguson

Practices on Friday
Ladd McConkey

Returning to Practice on Friday
Tyreek Hill

Sidelined with Oblique Injury
Anthony Richardson Sr.

X-Rays Negative on Anthony Richardson Sr.
Rashee Rice

Chiefs Expect Rashee Rice to be Suspended 4-6 Games
Mason McTavish

Several Teams Keeping Tabs on Mason McTavish
LA

Kyle Clifford Hangs Up Skates
Elias Pettersson

Out for "Revenge" in 2025-26
Roman Dolidze

Looks To Extend His Win Streak
Semyon Varlamov

to Start Skating Next Week
Anthony Hernandez

Set For UFC Vegas 109 Main Event
VAN

Vitali Kravtsov Returns to Canucks
Steve Erceg

In Dire Need Of Victory
Iasmin Lucindo

Aims To Bounce Back
Angela Hill

Set For A Main-Card Bout
Christian Rodriguez

A Favorite At UFC Vegas 109
Andre Fili

Set For His 24th UFC Fight
Miles Johns

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Jean Matsumoto

Looks To Bounce Back
Drake Baldwin

Homers Twice, Drives in Five
Payton Pritchard

Eager to Continue Improving
Austin Reaves

Expected to Receive Massive Pay Raise with Next Contract
Jayson Tatum

Out of Walking Boot
San Antonio Spurs

Spurs Bring in Micah Potter for Training Camp
Harrison Ingram

Re-Signs with Spurs

RANKINGS

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