Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: These players should be rostered in more 10-team leagues

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This article is aimed squarely at managers who play in 10-team leagues. Our weekly Waiver Wire column on Fridays covers players who are rostered in fewer than 50% of Yahoo leagues, which is great information for those in 12-team formats. And in some cases, the players mentioned in that article warrant attention in 10-team leagues. But there is a middle ground of players who are rostered in 50-80% of leagues, yet are still under-rostered.

Managers in shallow leagues should look at their roster and waiver wire, as the players listed below could be better options than someone in their lineup.

Starters​


Davis Martin, SP, White Sox, 80%: Very few pitchers have the skills to support a 1.62 ERA, and Martin isn’t one of them. But he’s pitching so well that he needs to be rostered in 90% of leagues while we determine if his improved plate dominance (27.1% strikeout rate, 5.2% walk rate) is for real. By holding those marks, Martin could maintain an ERA around 3.00.

Landen Roupp, SP, Giants, 77%: Improved swing-and-miss skills have made Roupp a must-roster player. The right-hander has overcome an unfortunate 67.9% strand rate, and his 2.52 xERA is even better than his actual mark (.309). Working in a pitcher-friendly home park gives Roupp a high floor, as does his ability to induce plenty of grounders.

Braxton Ashcraft, SP/RP, Pirates, 74%: Ashcraft has solid ratios (2.77 ERA, 1.05 WHIP) that would be incredible (1.82 ERA, 0.95 WHIP) if we removed one bad start on April 28. The 26-year-old throws hard (97.0 mph average fastball velocity), strikes batters out (26.7%) and induces plenty of grounders (7.3%). He’s rock-solid.

Ryan Weathers, SP, Yankees, 67%: K-BB% is an excellent indicator of a pitcher’s fantasy potential, and Weathers ranks 10th among qualified hurlers. His strikeout skills and membership on a team with an impressive 26-16 record give the left-hander a high ceiling.

Kyle Harrison, SP/RP, Brewers, 62%: The lack of interest in Harrison as more than a shallow-league streamer is astonishing. The lefty has been consistent, allowing no more than two runs in any start. And he had a statement outing on April 26, when he struck out 12 batters over six scoreless innings. The latest success story for the pitching-rich Brewers should be the most rostered starter in this article.


Payton Tolle, SP, Red Sox, 58%: Boston’s best pitching prospect has certainly met expectations since being recalled on April 23, logging impressive fantasy ratios (2.04 ERA, 0.74 WHIP) that are supported by a dazzling 31.0% strikeout rate. The 23-year-old could have the occasional bump in the road, such as his 4.2-inning, 3-run start in Toronto on April 28, but he may have the highest ceiling of any pitcher in this article.

Max Meyer, SP, Marlins, 51%: Meyer has been as consistent as any starter en route to posting a 2.79 ERA and a 1.10 WHIP. The righty has allowed three or fewer runs in every start, and he has been at his best of late by logging a 1.06 ERA, a 0.88 WHIP and a 17:4 K:BB ratio across his past three outings. The combination of his stability and youth should push his roster rate to 80%.

Relievers​


Louie Varland, RP, Blue Jays, 68%: Varland is already a top 10 closer option who should be rostered in virtually every league. He has stellar ratios (0.46 ERA, 1.07 WHIP), a terrific strikeout rate (38.2%) and has yet to blow a save. Toronto’s bullpen has been more effective since Jeff Hoffman switched to a setup role.

Bryan Baker, RP, Rays, 61%: Like Varland, Baker is a rock-solid closer who should be rostered in every league that values saves. The 31-year-old sits second in baseball with 11 saves and hasn’t allowed an earned run since April 18. And it helps that he pitches for a Rays team that is exceeding expectations and has the best record in the American League.

Lucas Erceg, RP, Royals, 61%: Although it would be nice to see Erceg improve on his 6.6 BB/9 rate, he is locked in as the closer in a Royals bullpen that doesn’t have many options. The 31-year-old hasn’t allowed an earned run in his past eight outings and ranks fourth in baseball in saves. Former closer Carlos Estévez recently had a setback on a rehab assignment and is unlikely to impact Erceg anytime soon.

Hitters​


Miguel Vargas, 1B/3B, White Sox, 73%: Just four players (Oneil Cruz, Elly De La Cruz, James Wood, Jordan Walker) have outproduced Vargas in all four counting-stat categories. A top 50 asset so far, he needs to be rostered in at least 85% of leagues. His newfound patience (16.3% walk rate) seems to have unlocked his long-touted potential.

Xander Bogaerts, SS, Padres, 63%: Bogaerts would be rostered in more leagues if not for the tremendous depth at shortstop. Still, the veteran is an across-the-board contributor who can combine 30 HR+SB with a respectable batting average. His roster rate should be 10% higher.

Daylen Lile, OF, Nationals, 50%: Although Lile is in a slump, he remains someone to add in five-outfielder leagues. His strong contact skills have contributed to a solid .271 xBA, and similar to Bogaerts, he will offer some category juice. Lile can contribute 160 R+RBI while benefitting from his membership in a Nats lineup that ranks third in runs scored.

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