In the blink of an eye, the calendar has flipped to 2020. The offseason is thankfully hauling right along and this is the last month without baseball games being played as Spring Training games begin next month. Are you excited? I know I am! Here at Fantrax, the fantasy baseball season never ends and we’re already churning out a ton of content to get you ready for your fantasy drafts. And what better way to get your prep started than with some early 2020 Baseball mixed league rankings? Rankings are the backbone of any prep work, or so they say.

These will be updated periodically throughout the offseason as players change teams, roles, or as that mushy thing between my ears changes…. hopefully for the better.

Fantasy Baseball is year-round here at Fantrax with 2020 leagues already forming. So what are you waiting for? Join a league today!

2020 Fantasy Baseball Mixed League Rankings

Qualifications for below positional eligibility: 20 Games Played or 10 Games Started

Catcher

Rank Player Team League 1 J.T. Realmuto PHI NL 2 Gary Sanchez NYY AL 3 Yasmani Grandal CHW AL 4 Willson Contreras CHC NL 5 Mitch Garver MIN AL 6 Will Smith LAD NL 7 Carson Kelly ARI NL 8 Salvador Perez KC AL 9 Jorge Alfaro MIA NL 10 Wilson Ramos NYM NL 11 Omar Narvaez MIL NL 12 Christian Vazquez BOS AL 13 Sean Murphy OAK AL 14 Travis d'Arnaud ATL NL 15 Yadier Molina STL NL 16 Francisco Mejia SD NL 17 Buster Posey SF NL 18 Tom Murphy SEA AL 19 Danny Jansen TOR AL 20 Roberto Perez CLE AL 21 Robinson Chirinos TEX AL 22 Tucker Barnhart CIN NL 23 Kurt Suzuki WAS NL 24 James McCann CHW AL 25 Yan Gomes WAS NL

Trending Up: None

Trending Down: James McCann

Ugh, catchers. There’s nothing pretty about this position right now. Even the guy ranked 2nd above hit just .232 in 2019 and is a career .246 hitter. The man ranked 5th wasn’t anywhere close to mixed league relevant coming into 2019 and there are two youngsters in the top-15 that began the season in the minors. Yeah, yuck is right. Once you get outside the top 10-12 options or so, it gets even more unsightly in a hurry.

A few to keep an eye on are Salvador Perez along with the two aforementioned youngsters, Will Smith and Sean Murphy. Perez missed the entire 2019 season due to injury but was widely considered a top-5 fantasy backstop before missing time. He’s currently working on a streak of four straight 20-homer seasons and six straight 60-plus RBI campaigns. Since becoming a full-time catcher in 2013, Perez has averaged 21 home runs, 74 RBI, and 54 runs scored while hitting anywhere from .235 to .292. If he appears healthy in Spring Training, Perez should be drafted as a top-10 catching option next season.

Both Smith and Murphy performed about as well as we can realistically expect from rookie catchers. Smith went full beast mode in August before cooling dramatically in September, only to finish hot in the last week of the regular season. The tools are there for Smith to be a .250-.260 hitter with 20 to 25-plus home runs annually, perhaps as soon as 2020. While the offensive upside isn’t quite as high with Murphy, his defensive prowess should keep him in the lineup 120+ games a season and he has the contact skills and raw power to hit in the .270-.280 range with home run totals in the teens.

1st Base

Rank Player Team League 1 Cody Bellinger LAD NL 2 Freddie Freeman ATL NL 3 Pete Alonso NYM NL 4 Paul Goldschmidt STL NL 5 Matt Olson OAK AL 6 Anthony Rizzo CHC NL 7 Jose Abreu CHW AL 8 Max Muncy LAD NL 9 Josh Bell PIT NL 10 Rhys Hoskins PHI NL 11 D.J. LeMahieu NYY AL 12 Carlos Santana CLE AL 13 Edwin Encarnacion NYY AL 14 Trey Mancini BAL AL 15 Yuli Gurriel HOU AL 16 Luke Voit NYY AL 17 Danny Santana TEX AL 18 Michael Chavis BOS AL 19 Ryan McMahon COL NL 20 Yasmani Grandal CHW AL 21 Christian Walker ARI NL 22 Evan White SEA AL 23 Eric Hosmer SD NL 24 Hunter Dozier KC AL 25 Mark Canha OAK AL 26 Nate Lowe TB AL 27 Joc Pederson LAD NL 28 C.J. Cron DET AL 29 Daniel Murphy COL NL 30 Joey Votto CIN NL 31 Dan Vogelbach SEA AL 32 Travid d'Arnaud ATL NL 33 Yandy Diaz TB AL 34 Howie Kendrick WAS NL 35 Renato Nunez BAL AL 36 Garrett Cooper MIA NL 37 Miguel Cabrera DET AL 38 Ji-Man Choi TB AL 39 Albert Pujols LAA AL 40 Justin Smoak MIL NL

Trending Up: Evan White

Trending Down: Nate Lowe

Honestly, I could ramble on for thousands of words about the great Pete Alonso here. You know I could. But this position is much more than just the slugging rookie. But since I mentioned him, let’s start with Alonso who just broke Aaron Judge’s rookie home run record. That’s right, 53 baseballs cleared the outfield fence for the Polar Bear this season to go along with 120 RBI, 103 runs, and a .260 average. This is what we should come to expect from Alonso annually. He’ll likely be in the .255-.275 range more often than not while being at or near the top of the home run leaderboard and driving in well over 100 runs. He’s one of the best sluggers in the game right now and needs to be drafted as such.

#️⃣5️⃣3️⃣ for Pete Alonso, and it was a shot. (🎥 @mlb) pic.twitter.com/q2mJHtLu8D — NBC Sports (@NBCSports) September 29, 2019

The only reason Alonso is not #1 here is the fact that both Cody Bellinger and Freddie Freeman can also add a .300-plus average to go along with their power contributions. These three are the current gold standard at the position.

Another young slugger that looks poised to join the elite at this position is Matt Olson. In the year of the home run, Olson quietly slugged “just 36” in 127 games while driving in 91 and hitting .267. Add in another 25-30 games and he’d likely be in the 45/110 area. Olson’s profile is similar to Alonso’s, and while I don’t think he’ll be quite as good as Pete, Olson has the potential to be the top fantasy first baseman in the AL along with Mr. Consistent, Jose Abreu. Seriously, go check out his career numbers. It’s astonishing how consistently solid Abreu has been since debuting in 2014. He’s truly one of the most underrated sluggers in the game.

If you miss out on a big name here, don’t be afraid to go with some of the boring veterans that nobody ever seems excited to draft. The trio of Edwin Encarnacion, Carlos Santana, and Yuli Gurriel are all still plugging along and put up top-10 numbers for this position in 2019. And in the later rounds, consider a youngster with upside like Nate Lowe, Michael Chavis, or Ryan McMahon. Although, the Rays are being a pain in the butt and signing players to cut into Lowe’s playing time. It might be wise to hold off on Lowe for now and wait to see how things shake out in Spring Training.

One recent addition to these rankings is Seattle Mariners’ top prospect, Evan White. After signing an extension a few weeks back, White is penciled in as the opening day first baseman and carries sneaky-good fantasy upside in 2020. Using a late-round pick on him in drafts could pay solid dividends this season as White has a poor man’s Paul Goldschmidt offensive profile and the defensive prowess to keep him in the lineup even when he’s struggling at the plate.

2nd Base

Rank Player Team League 1 Jose Altuve HOU AL 2 Gleyber Torres NYY AL 3 Ozzie Albies ATL NL 4 Keston Hiura MIL NL 5 Ketel Marte ARI NL 6 Jonathan Villar MIA NL 7 Whit Merrifield KC AL 8 Max Muncy LAD NL 9 D.J. LeMahieu NYY AL 10 Eduardo Escobar ARI NL 11 Cavan Biggio TOR AL 12 Jeff McNeil NYM NL 13 Gavin Lux LAD NL 14 Mike Moustakas CIN NL 15 Garrett Hampson COL NL 16 Kevin Newman PIT NL 17 Tommy Edman STL NL 18 Danny Santana TEX AL 19 Michael Chavis BOS AL 20 Dee Gordon SEA AL 21 Cesar Hernandez CLE AL 22 Ryan McMahon COL NL 23 Brandon Lowe TB AL 24 Nick Solak TEX AL 25 Kolten Wong STL NL 26 Rougned Odor TEX AL 27 Tommy La Stella LAA AL 28 Luis Arraez MIN AL 29 Luis Urias MIL NL 30 Nick Madrigal CHW AL 31 Carter Kieboom WAS NL 32 Robinson Cano NYM NL 33 Hanser Alberto BAL AL 34 Starlin Castro WAS NL 35 Howie Kendrick WAS NL 36 Adam Frazier PIT NL 37 Jonathan Schoop DET NL 38 Shed Long SEA AL 39 Jose Peraza BOS AL 40 Isan Diaz MIA NL

Trending Up: Luis Urias

Trending Down: Carter Kieboom

This position is slowly but surely getting deeper and deeper. Ketel Marte broke out, and both D.J. LeMahieu and Jonathan Villar broke out again. All three rank in my top-10 for 2020. Joining them are your usual stars, a new star in Gleyber Torres, and one of the most underrated hitters in baseball, Jeff McNeil.

The 2019 season also gave us the Major League debuts of Keston Hiura, Cavan Biggio, and most recently, Gavin Lux, along with the lesser-heralded Nick Solak, Tommy Edman, and Luis Arraez. Obviously, Hiura and Lux are the two stalwarts here with how they performed this season, both in the minors and Majors.

Along with Yordan Alvarez and Luis Robert, Lux was the hottest prospect of 2019, especially after he got to Triple-A. He has a chance to take over at second base full time for the Dodgers in 2020 and possesses the across the board upside that can make him a fantasy star in short order. The type of fantasy star that Hiura has already blossomed into after hitting .303 with a near 40/20 pace. I wouldn’t expect that much power in 2020, but the .300 average is legit and Hiura could easily put up a 30/20 type of season. Basically, he’s fantasy gold.

If Hiura/Lux are gold, guys like Biggio, Edman, Solak, and Arraez are bronze. Arraez has one of the best hit tools and plate approaches you’ll see in the Majors today, but doesn’t possess much power or speed. Still, the average is an asset and makes him a safe late-round flier. Outside of batting average, Biggio put up decent across the board numbers and gives an added boost in OBP leagues. Don’t overlook him due to the lower average. Edman also finished 2019 helping fantasy owners out in many categories and was sneakily one of the best fantasy infielders down the stretch.

Lastly, we have one of my 2019 pre-season darlings, Garrett Hampson. You knew I couldn’t get away without talking about my boy Hampson, right! While the entire picture might not be a masterpiece, he was able to go all Bob Ross on us and put a damn good little September bush over in the corner. That will be our little secret. That little bush equated to a .318 average, five home runs, nine steals, and 16 runs in September. Will the Rockies give him a starting gig in 2020? They better! With them, who knows. But it’s certainly worth a late-round selection to find out. I’ll ride this Hampson hype train off the rails if I have to. Trust me.

Various transactions over the last month or two have caused a little stir here. After being dealt from San Diego to Milwaukee, Luis Urias is now in line to start at shortstop for the Brewers and still possesses .290/15/5 upside. On the other hand, the Nationals are signing every infielder they can find which clouds the playing time and 2020 outlook for top prospect, Carter Kieboom.

3rd Base

Rank Player Team League 1 Nolan Arenado COL NL 2 Alex Bregman HOU AL 3 Rafael Devers BOS AL 4 Anthony Rendon LAA AL 5 Jose Ramirez CLE AL 6 Kris Bryant CHC NL 7 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. TOR AL 8 Yoan Moncada CHW AL 9 Eugenio Suarez CIN NL 10 Matt Chapman OAK AL 11 Manny Machado SD NL 12 Max Muncy LAD NL 13 Josh Donaldson FA - 14 D.J. LeMahieu NYY AL 15 Jeff McNeil NYM NL 16 Mike Moustakas CIN NL 17 J.D. Davis NYM NL 18 Miguel Sano MIN AL 19 Yuli Gurriel HOU AL 20 Eduardo Escobar ARI NL 21 Tommy Edman STL NL 22 Scott Kingery PHI NL 23 Justin Turner LAD NL 24 Hunter Dozier KC AL 25 Ryan McMahon COL NL 26 Miguel Andujar NYY AL 27 Yandy Diaz TB AL 28 Luis Arraez MIN AL 29 Tommy La Stella LAA AL 30 Gio Urshela NYY AL 31 Nick Solak TEX AL 32 Brian Anderson MIA NL 33 Hanser Alberto BAL AL 34 Starlin Castro WAS NL 35 Kyle Seager SEA AL 36 Jon Berti MIA NL 37 Matt Carpenter STL NL 38 Howie Kendrick WAS NL 39 David Fletcher LAA AL 40 Asdrubal Cabrera WAS NL

Trending Up: J.D. Davis

Trending Down: Jon Berti

I’m sure many of us expected Vladimir Guerrero Jr to be topping these rankings by now. Or at least in the top three. Nope, not quite yet, but with the gains he made in the second half along with his MVP upside, he still wiggles his way into my top-10 here ahead of some pretty talented names. One of those names being Eugenio Suarez and his 48 home runs. Suarez was one of the biggest benefactors of the power jump in baseball and it will be interesting to see what he does for an encore. Even if (when) homers regress, Suarez is a 30-homer threat every season.

At the top, you really can’t go wrong. Nolan Arenado has been the gold standard for the last few years and now has Alex Bregman and Rafael Devers right there with him. After a monster 2018 season, Jose Ramirez stunk up the joint in the 1st half of the season, outside of steals, then went all 2018 J-Ram on the league in the 2nd half, with the exception of only having six steals. The end result was another 20/20 effort and three straight months hitting above .300 to end the season. Will the real Jose Ramirez please stand up in 2020? Seriously, we’d all love to know. My money would be on something closer to the 2nd half J-Ram, but not fully.

When looking at the older crowd at this position (Grumble grumble, respect your elders and get off my lawn), Josh Donaldson had a resurgent 2019. While on the other hand, Justin Turner and Matt Carpenter went in the opposite direction. The hot corner is also home to some of the top waiver wire adds of the 2019 season. Jeff McNeil, Tommy Edman (again), Gio Urshela, J.D. Davis, Scott Kingery, and Tommy La Stella all saved us or plugged in a hole at some point this season. All should be on your radar in the mid to late rounds.

Shortstop

Rank Player Team League 1 Francisco Lindor CLE AL 2 Alex Bregman HOU AL 3 Trevor Story COL NL 4 Fernando Tatis Jr SD NL 5 Trea Turner WAS NL 6 Xander Bogaerts BOS AL 7 Javier Baez CHC NL 8 Bo Bichette TOR AL 9 Gleyber Torres NYY AL 10 Carlos Correa HOU AL 11 Jonathan Villar MIA NL 12 Adalberto Mondesi KC AL 13 Manny Machado SD NL 14 Marcus Semien OAK AL 15 Tim Anderson CHW AL 16 Jorge Polanco MIN AL 17 Corey Seager LAD NL 18 Amed Rosario NYM NL 19 Didi Gregorius PHI AL 20 Nico Hoerner CHC NL 21 Elvis Andrus TEX AL 22 Paul DeJong STL NL 23 Kevin Newman PIT NL 24 Jean Segura PHI NL 25 Scott Kingery PHI NL 26 Dansby Swanson ATL NL 27 Willy Adames TB AL 28 Luis Urias MIL NL 29 Mauricio Dubon SF NL 30 Carter Kieboom WAS NL 31 Jon Berti MIA NL 32 Nick Ahmed ARI NL 33 Freddy Galvis CIN NL 34 David Fletcher LAA AL 35 Chris Taylor LAD NL 36 Andrelton Simmons LAA AL 37 Jurickson Profar OAK AL 38 Jose Peraza BOS AL 39 J.P Crawford SEA AL 40 Brandon Crawford SF NL

Trending Up: Bo Bichette

Trending Down: Adalberto Mondesi

This position is downright sexy right now. I mean, it always has been in fantasy, but shortstop is especially deep and talented right now. You all should know how much of a Carlos Correa backer I’ve been over the years. Well, he barely even cracks my top-10 shortstops for 2020. That’s ridiculous to think about. Hold on, let me gather myself for a second here. At the top, I can realistically make a case for seven shortstops to be drafted within the first two rounds on draft day, and 4-6 more in the next couple of rounds after that.

One of those elite options I can see having a wide draft range in 2020 is Fernando Tatis Jr. To say the 2nd generation shortstop dominated as a rookie is a major understatement. In 84 games, Tatis racked up 22 home runs, 17 steals, 53 RBI, 61 runs, and a .317/.379/.590/.969 slash line. A lot of people will point to a .410 BABIP, which was the highest mark in the Majors for batters with 300-plus plate appearances, and scream regression until they’re blue in the face. Yes, that is an unsustainable mark and sure to come down, but even if we cut 30-40 points off Tatis’ average and make him a .280 hitter, his 35/25 potential makes him a bonafide fantasy stud and worth of an early selection in 2020 drafts.

With their elite speed and modest pop, both Jonathan Villar and Adalberto Mondesi will be hot names come draft season this spring. Villar gets ranked a couple spots higher for me due to the fact that he’s more established and a safer option in my eyes. Basically, I feel more confident that he won’t implode and potentially be a .220 hitter. Also, there’s some concern about how Mondesi’s power will look after a major shoulder injury/surgery. I spoke more in-depth about him and the injury here.

After his promotion, Bo Bichette was an extra-base hit machine accumulating 18 doubles and 11 home runs in only 46 games. Only Nicholas Castellanos, Alex Bregman, and Corey Seager had more doubles from 7/29 on and his 142 wRC+ was tied for 41st in baseball over that span. Draft with confidence in rounds 4-5 or so.

This position is so damn deep, guys like Tim Anderson and Marcus Semien can’t crack my top-10. Semien finished as a top-25 overall player and Anderson won the AL batting title for crying out loud. But as Tom Hanks once told us, “There’s no crying in baseball.” So we rank them still in the top-15 and move on with our lives. While their 2019 seasons were phenomenal, Anderson doesn’t have the approach to hit for an average like this again and Semien literally came out of nowhere with this dominance. Even with some likely regressions, both are back-end starting options or high-end targets for your middle infield or utility slots.

Outfield

Rank Player Team League 1 Ronald Acuña Jr. ATL NL 2 Mike Trout LAA AL 3 Christian Yelich MIL NL 4 Juan Soto WAS NL 5 Mookie Betts BOS AL 6 Cody Bellinger LAD NL 7 Yordan Alvarez HOU AL 8 J.D. Martinez BOS AL 9 Bryce Harper PHI NL 10 Aaron Judge NYY AL 11 George Springer HOU AL 12 Austin Meadows TB AL 13 Starling Marte PIT NL 14 Charlie Blackmon COL NL 15 Ketel Marte ARI NL 16 Kris Bryant CHC NL 17 Eloy Jimenez CHW AL 18 Ramon Laureano OAK AL 19 Jorge Soler KC AL 20 Whit Merrifield KC AL 21 Tommy Pham SD NL 22 Giancarlo Stanton NYY AL 23 Michael Conforto NYM NL 24 Victor Robles WAS NL 25 Max Kepler MIN AL 26 Yasiel Puig FA - 27 Marcell Ozuna FA - 28 Luis Robert CHW AL 29 Joey Gallo TEX AL 30 Lourdes Gurriel Jr. TOR AL 31 Eddie Rosario MIN AL 32 Michael Brantley HOU AL 33 Oscar Mercado CLE AL 34 Jeff McNeil NYM NL 35 Jo Adell LAA AL 36 Trey Mancini BAL AL 37 Andrew Benintendi BOS AL 38 Nicholas Castellanos FA - 39 J.D. Davis NYM NL 40 Franmil Reyes CLE AL 41 David Dahl COL NL 42 Andrew McCutchen PHI NL 43 Kyle Schwarber CHC NL 44 Nick Senzel CIN NL 45 Bryan Reynolds PIT NL 46 Adam Eaton WAS NL 47 Shin-Soo Choo TEX AL 48 Nomar Mazara CHW AL 49 Garrett Hampson COL NL 50 Mitch Haniger SEA AL 51 Willie Calhoun TEX AL 52 Scott Kingery PHI NL 53 Kyle Tucker HOU AL 54 Joc Pederson LAD NL 55 Lorenzo Cain KC AL 56 Danny Santana TEX AL 57 Byron Buxton MIN AL 58 Justin Upton LAA NL 59 Aristides Aquino CIN NL 60 Austin Riley ATL NL 61 Mike Yastrzemski SF NL 62 Trent Grisham SD NL 63 Hunter Dozier KC AL 64 Mark Canha OAK AL 65 Brett Gardner NYY AL 66 Avisail Garcia MIL NL 67 Wil Myers SD NL 68 A.J. Pollock LAD NL 69 Shogo Akiyama CIN NL 70 Dylan Carlson STL NL 71 Ian Happ CHC NL 72 Kole Calhoun ARI NL 73 Corey Dickerson MIA NL 74 Ryan Braun MIL NL 75 Kyle Lewis SEA AL 76 Jesse Winker CIN NL 77 Gregory Polanco PIT NL 78 Victor Reyes DET AL 79 Brandon Nimmo NYM NL 80 Yoshitomo Tsutsugo TB AL 81 David Peralta ARI NL 82 Alex Verdugo LAD NL 83 Hunter Renfroe TB AL 84 Sam Hilliard COL NL 85 Josh Rojas ARI NL 86 Mallex Smith SEA AL 87 Anthony Santander BAL AL 88 Drew Waters ATL NL 89 Aaron Hicks NYY AL 90 Kevin Pillar FA - 91 Domingo Santana SEA AL 92 Brian Goodwin LAA AL 93 Josh Reddick HOU AL 94 Tyler O'Neill STL NL 95 Brian Anderson MIA NL 96 Nick Markakis ATL NL 97 Jason Heyward CHC NL 98 Austin Hays BAL AL 99 Jackie Bradley Jr. BOS AL 100 Ian Desmond COL NL

Trending Up: Luis Robert

Trending Down: Aristides Aquino

If you thought shortstop was deep, wait until you dig into those outfield rankings above. A case can be made for the top six picks on draft day all being outfielders. A strong case at that.

Trust me, I wanted to rank Yordan Alvarez higher, but couldn’t bring myself to put him ahead of the studs ranked 1-6. And yes, I know he doesn’t fully meet my ranking criteria (only had nine games started in the outfield), so if 20/10 is your threshold, plan accordingly. But at the same time, his offensive prowess makes him worth a 2nd round pick, even if you can only slot him at UTIL.

Yordan Alvarez's 474 ft moonshot is the farthest HR by an @astros player in the Statcast era (since 2015). pic.twitter.com/lDBPpCPf8M — MLB Stats (@MLBStats) July 20, 2019

Surprised to see Eloy Jimenez this high? You shouldn’t be. While the Dominican slugger’s career got off to a slow start, there weren’t many hitters better from August 1st on.

Eloy Jimenez since the beginning of August… 199 AB, .317 AVG, 10 2B, 13 HR, 38 RBI, 30 R K/BB still not great, but I still believe Eloy settles in as a .280+ hitter with some .300+ seasons sprinkled in & 35-40+ HR. Think 2014-2019 Nelson Cruz.#MLB #FantasyBaseball #WhiteSox — Eric Cross (@EricCross04) September 22, 2019

When you add in the last week of the season after this tweet, Jimenez hit .308 with 11 doubles, 14 home runs, 40 RBI, and 33 runs scored combined in August and September. This is a formidable slugger and a great target after the top-50 picks in 2020. If it weren’t for that Pete Alonso fellow, Jimenez would’ve led all rookies in both home runs and RBI this season.

Sticking with this young gun theme, get ready for the Luis Robert and Jo Adell show. It’s Rated-S for Studly and coming to a fantasy roster near you. Both men should be up fairly quickly into the 2020 season and possess incredibly high across the board upside. It wouldn’t shock me in the slightest if both put up 20/20 seasons in 2020. It really wouldn’t. Draft accordingly. And with the White Sox signing Robert to an extension, it wouldn’t surprise me if Robert is the opening day starter in center field.

It would take me until opening day to get in all the thoughts I have about this outfield crop, so I’ll hit on some quick notes.

Juan Soto is the goat-o.

Bryce Harper is really good but not elite. Stop bashing him for something he’s not.

Jorge Soler led the Americal League in home runs and makes a case for a top-50 overall selection in 2020.

Austin Meadows ended the season on a tear and is right behind Soler in my rankings.

Ramon Laureano broke out and is legit. Check out this deep dive for more.

Aristedes Aquino also broke out (in a huge way). Not a star, but could have a Puig-like impact if he doesn’t implode due to his plate approach.

Oscar Mercado finished 2019 on a 20/20/100 R pace and is one of my favorite mid-round power/speed targets.

Same goes for Victor Robles, who didn’t have as bad of a season as most think. Just ignore the hard contact rate.

I’m expecting a bounceback 2020 campaign from Andrew Benintendi. As someone that has seen him for his entire professional career and even before that at Arkansas, he’s better than what he showed this season.

If you can stomach a .240 average, give Riley and his 40-homer upside a look in the later-middle rounds.

Don’t forget about veterans like Andrew McCutchen, Justin Upton, Ryan Braun, and Gregory Polanco in the later stages of your drafts.

Don’t forget about GARRETT HAMPSON either! See, still driving that crazy train.

Other prospects to keep an eye on are Dylan Carlson, Drew Waters, Cristian Pache, and Alex Kirilloff.

Starting Pitcher

Rank Player Team League 1 Gerrit Cole NYY AL 2 Jacob deGrom NYM NL 3 Max Scherzer WAS NL 4 Justin Verlander HOU AL 5 Walker Buehler LAD NL 6 Shane Bieber CLE AL 7 Mike Clevinger CLE AL 8 Jack Flaherty STL NL 9 Stephen Strasburg WAS NL 10 Chris Sale BOS AL 11 Blake Snell TB AL 12 Luis Castillo CIN NL 13 Clayton Kershaw LAD NL 14 Chris Paddack SD NL 15 Aaron Nola PHI NL 16 Patrick Corbin WAS NL 17 Luis Severino NYY AL 18 Noah Syndergaard NYM NL 19 Lucas Giolito CHW AL 20 Mike Soroka ATL NL 21 Jose Berrios MIN AL 22 Charlie Morton TB AL 23 Eduardo Rodriguez BOS AL 24 Brandon Woodruff MIL NL 25 Zack Greinke HOU AL 26 Zac Gallen ARI NL 27 Corey Kluber TEX AL 28 James Paxton NYY AL 29 Jesus Luzardo OAK AL 30 Tyler Glasnow TB AL 31 Yu Darvish CHC NL 32 Carlos Carrasco CLE AL 33 Zack Wheeler PHI NL 34 Trevor Bauer CIN NL 35 Sonny Gray CIN NL 36 Hyun-Jin Ryu TOR AL 37 Frankie Montas OAK AL 38 Madison Bumgarner ARI NL 39 Shohei Ohtani LAA AL 40 Lance Lynn TEX AL 41 Max Fried ATL NL 42 David Price BOS AL 43 Kyle Hendricks CHC NL 44 Luke Weaver ARI NL 45 Dustin May LAD NL 46 Matthew Boyd DET AL 47 Dinelson Lamet SD NL 48 Mike Minor TEX AL 49 Sean Manaea OAK AL 50 Robbie Ray ARI NL 51 Caleb Smith MIA NL 52 German Marquez COL NL 53 Julio Urias LAD NL 54 Griffin Canning LAA AL 55 Brendan McKay TB AL 56 Joe Musgrove PIT NL 57 Lance McCullers Jr. HOU AL 58 Michael Kopech CHW AL 59 Mike Foltynewicz ATL NL 60 Andrew Heaney LAA AL 61 Dylan Cease CHW AL 62 Jake Odorizzi MIN AL 63 Kenta Maeda LAD NL 64 Carlos Martinez STL NL 65 Dallas Keuchel CHW AL 66 Masahiro Tanaka NYY AL 67 Marcus Stroman NYM NL 68 Adrian Houser MIL NL 69 Mitch Keller PIT NL 70 Anthony DeSclafani CIN NL 71 Joey Lucchesi SD NL 72 Ryan Yarbrough TB NL 73 Jon Gray COL NL 74 Aaron Civale CLE AL 75 MacKenzie Gore SD NL 76 Garrett Richards SD NL 77 Cole Hamels ATL NL 78 Steven Matz NYM NL 79 Chris Archer PIT NL 80 Nate Pearson TOR AL 81 Ian Anderson ATL NL 82 Mike Fiers OAK AL 83 Jon Lester CHC NL 84 Ross Stripling LAD NL 85 Sandy Alcantara MIA NL 86 A.J. Puk OAK AL 87 Miles Mikolas STL NL 88 John Means BAL AL 89 Rich Hill MIN AL 90 Kyle Gibson TEX AL 91 Jose Quintana CHC NL 92 Reynaldo Lopez CHW AL 93 Rick Porcello NYM NL 94 Michael Pineda MIN AL 95 Pablo Lopez MIA NL 96 Jose Urquidy HOU AL 97 Adam Wainwright STL NL 98 Dylan Bundy LAA AL 99 Domingo German NYY AL 100 Logan Webb SF NL

Trending Up: Brandon Woodruff & Zac Gallen

Trending Down: Tyler Glasnow

As a Red Sox fan, I’d be lying if I didn’t admit concern around Chris Sale. The strikeouts were still exquisite, but he didn’t look the same for around 80% of his starts. He’s still an SP1 but proceed with caution. Speaking of SP1’s, we have a trio of newcomers to the exclusive club. The trifecta of Shane Bieber, Jack Flaherty, and Mike Clevinger more that earned their way into this territory with the seasons they had. Bieber was a rock all season and reached strikeout levels I didn’t think he had in him. Meanwhile, Flaherty and Clevinger were two of the best pitchers in baseball over the 2nd half of the season.

Flaherty: 15 GS, 99.1 IP, 0.91 ERA, 0.72 WHIP, 2.1 BB/9, 11.2 K/9

Clevinger: 16 GS, 101.2 IP, 2.30 ERA, 1.07 WHIP, 2.4 BB/9, 11.4 K/9

Jack Flaherty, Nasty 84mph Slider de-bats Russell (Flaherty's 230th K of the season). 😨 pic.twitter.com/RPUZnZNrgY — Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) September 29, 2019

While you’re at it, throw Chris Paddack, Luis Castillo, and Mike Soroka in this discussion as well. The first two are borderline fantasy aces while Soroka should settle into SP2 range due to his lower strikeout rate.

Both Lucas Giolito and Eduardo Rodriguez took big steps forward and are in the SP2/3 conversation for 2020. The same was happening in Tampa Bay with Tyler Glasnow before another injury knocked him out for most of the 2nd half. I’m still not 100% sold on Giolito and Glasnow, but they definitely have the upside to remain in the SP2 mix. I’d just love to see Glasnow develop some sort of a changeup. On the other end of the spectrum, Blake Snell couldn’t come anywhere close to his 2018 breakout, Luis Severino was hurt all season, and Noah Syndergaard is still trying to recapture his former elite status.

Of course, we had some rookie debuts (outside of Paddack) in 2019, some good, but mostly lackluster. Zac Gallen pitched well from the moment he debuted and is a great mid-round target. Guys like Dylan Cease, Mitch Keller, and Griffing Canning are better left until the later rounds.

Don’t forget about the returns of Michael Kopech or Lance McCullers Jr either. McCullers is very risky of course but makes for a good late-round flier due to his upside. Kopech is one I’d be willing to look at a few rounds earlier. He was really finding his footing before going under the knife.

Relief Pitcher

Rank Player Team League 1 Josh Hader MIL NL 2 Roberto Osuna HOU AL 3 Kirby Yates SD NL 4 Aroldis Chapman NYY AL 5 Brad Hand CLE AL 6 Liam Hendriks OAK AL 7 Ken Giles TOR AL 8 Kenley Jansen LAD NL 9 Raisel Iglesias CIN NL 10 Edwin Diaz NYM NL 11 Taylor Rogers MIN AL 12 Craig Kimbrel CHC NL 13 Hector Neris PHI NL 14 Sean Doolittle WAS NL 15 Ian Kennedy KC AL 16 Alex Colome CHW AL 17 Hansel Robles LAA AL 18 Brandon Workman BOS AL 19 Archie Bradley ARI NL 20 Carlos Martinez MIA NL 21 Emilio Pagan TB AL 22 Mark Melancon ATL NL 23 Jose Leclerc TEX AL 24 Joe Jimenez DET AL 25 Seth Lugo NYM NL 26 Mychal Givens BAL AL 27 Giovanny Gallegos STL NL 28 Matt Magill SEA AL 29 Nick Anderson TB AL 30 Keone Kela PIT NL 31 Kevin Ginkel ARI NL 32 Ryan Pressly HOU AL 33 Emmanuel Clase CLE AL 34 Will Smith ATL NL 35 Shane Greene ATL NL 36 Dellin Betances NYM NL 37 Shaun Anderson SF NL 38 Scott Oberg COL NL 39 Andres Munoz SD NL 40 Sergio Romo MIN AL 41 Adam Ottavino NYY AL 42 Daniel Hudson WAS NL 43 James Karinchak CLE AL 44 Ryne Stanek MIA NL 45 Blake Treinen LAD NL 46 Andrew Miller STL NL 47 Jordan Hicks STL NL 48 Drew Pomeranz SD NL 49 Jairo Diaz COL NL 50 Michael Lorenzen CIN NL

Trending Up: Brandon Workman

Trending Down: Kenley Jansen

Two young arms to keep on your radar are Andres Munoz and James Karinchak. Both possess elite late-inning stuff with massive strikeout potential. Munoz is the closer of the future in San Diego and performed admirably this season with a 3.91 ERA and 11.7 K/9 across 23.0 innings. Look for him to take that next step in 2020 towards becoming a late-inning asset. If you love insane strikeout rates, you’re going to be quite enamored with the Indians young fireballer, Karinchak. The Bryant University product registered a 22.0 K/9 rate in the minors last season across three levels. Yes, you’re seeing that right. The control, as you can expect, needs some work, but there’s huge upside here. If you play in leagues where holds are counted in some way, Karinchak needs to be on your radar come draft day. Same for Nick Anderson, Giovanny Gallegos, and Emmanuel Clase.

One player that was especially hard to rank was the man that gave me so many headaches as a Red Sox fan, Mr. Craig Kimbrel. After getting a late start to the season, Kimbrel looked like a shell of himself for the Cubs. He ended the 2019 season with a disgusting 6.53 ERA and 1.60 WHIP and is nothing more than a late-round target right now.

Media Credit: John Cordes/Icon Sportswire, John Adams/Icon Sportswire, Adam Davis/Icon Sportswire, NBC Sports, MLB Stats, Rob Friedman/Pitching Ninja.

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