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    You are at:Home»Sports»Fantasy Baseball Offseason Tracker: Top Moves
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    Fantasy Baseball Offseason Tracker: Top Moves

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtNovember 20, 2025007 Mins Read
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    Fantasy Baseball Offseason Tracker: Top Moves
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    The hot stove is up to temperature, the wheeling and dealing has commenced, and a number of noteworthy free agents have already come off the board. Where can you stay grounded amid this maelstrom of maneuvers?

    Right here is where. Chris Towers and I will be making the Offseason Tracker our home base for the next few months, churning out content as the news warrants. Here, you’ll get a breakdown of all the moves that matter for Fantasy Baseball without all the fluff. (OK, maybe a little fluff.)

    Bookmark it. Read it. Live by it.

    Iglesias re-ups for one year at exactly the same rate ($16 million) as the previous three. Clearly, the Braves were looking for continuity, and that makes the analysis here rather easy. He’s the closer again for an expected contender and a near lock for 30 saves, provided he stays healthy. He missed that number by one in 2025, mostly because of some early-season struggles. Once he cut back on his slider, though, he was clearly back to form, compiling a 1.25 ERA, 0.69 WHIP and 10.0 K/9 in his final 45 appearances. That’ll play, all right, and positions Iglesias to be one of the first 12 relievers off the board in 2026. –Scott White

    What a fall for Rodriguez, who was regarded a couple years ago as one of the game’s burgeoning aces after a multi-year run as a top-10 overall prospect. Now, the Orioles have dealt him away for one year of some 32-year-old outfielder who just hit .228. That’s not entirely fair to Ward, who also connected for 36 home runs in 2025, but most projections have him regressing to 25-30 in 2026. He’s also joining a team that’s loaded with solid-but-less-than-All-Star-worthy corner bats. There already wasn’t room in the lineup for all of Dylan Beavers, Samuel Basallo, Coby Mayo, Tyler O’Neill and Ryan Mountcastle. Now, there’s room for one fewer. It won’t be Ward, but does that mean we’ll have to wait even longer for Basallo to contribute in Fantasy? If so, that’s a bummer.

    But the real story here is Rodriguez, who Angels GM Perry Minasian says is expected to be ready for spring training after missing all of 2025 with lat and elbow issues. The lat has been a recurring problem, also costing Rodriguez time in 2024 and as a minor leaguer in 2022, and the elbow required debridement surgery in August. The Orioles only made this deal because they couldn’t trust him to stay healthy, but having said that, he wouldn’t be the first pitcher to overcome a multi-year injury trend and still go on to meet his potential. We have no evidence that his stuff has diminished with this latest rash of injuries, so I’m still inclined to rank him as a top 75 starting pitcher for 2026. This trade is sure to give some drafters pause even at that late stage, though.  –Scott White

    Grisham’s decision to accept the qualifying offer is a curious one given that he just had far and away his best season, homering 34 times as the primary center fielder for the Yankees. Some major outlets were projecting him to receive a four- or five-year deal for a similar annual value as the qualifying offer, but his agent probably has a better read on the market.

    If nothing else, you could say he’s betting on himself with this move, hoping to re-enter the market next offseason without the stigma of being a one-hit wonder, but now comes the hard part: doing it again. You might think the return to Yankee Stadium will help, given that he’s a left-handed batter, but he actually hit two-thirds of his home runs on the road. If the Yankees are serious about giving Jasson Dominguez regular playing time next year and also bringing back Cody Bellinger, Grisham may be fighting for at-bats again. The Yankees still make for a better landing than a lot of clubs, but you can understand why drafters might approach Grisham with some skepticism in 2026. –Scott White

    A modest showing by Torres in 2025 led him to accept the Tigers’ qualifying offer rather than testing the free agent market, and you might think a return to Comerica Park is a bad move for his Fantasy value given its reputation. But it actually played well for right-handed hitters in 2025, and Torres batted .285 with a .449 slugging percentage there compared to .223 and .327 on the road. On balance, he performed well below his .271 xBA and .452 xSLG, having delivered his best average exit velocity in three years and some of his best walk and strikeout numbers ever, so some better luck would go a long way toward redeeming him in Fantasy. He’s not a surefire top-12 choice, though, even at a position as thin as second base. –Scott White

    Something tells me that if Woodruff hadn’t gone into the offseason nursing a lat injury, he wouldn’t have had to accept the Brewers’ qualifying offer, instead pursuing a multi-year deal. But now, he’s back in prove-it mode after already overcoming a more significant shoulder injury in near miraculous fashion. Even though the shoulder capsule surgery that he underwent in 2023 took 3 mph off his fastball — normally a career-ender for a pitcher, particularly one so fastball-reliant — he basically picked up where he left off statistically, even delivering the best strikeout rate of his career. A new cutter is largely to credit for saving him, and his fortunes rose and fell with its usage. He’ll be plenty motivated now that he’s pitching for a contract again, but he would have been worth selecting among the top 36 starting pitchers either way.  –Scott White

    The Cubs’ decision to decline Imanaga’s three-year, $57.5 million option after the season makes more sense now that we see the way everything played out. They probably suspected he’d accept the $22.025 million qualifying offer, which he did, so now they still have him but without the multi-year commitment.

    The maneuver would seem to alleviate suspicions that he’s cooked, which were worth entertaining given that a number of key metrics fell off during his sophomore season, namely his K/9 rate (from 9.0 to 7.3) and his swinging-strike rate (from 14.5 percent to 11.9 percent). It’s sort of misleading to call it his sophomore season given that he’s 32, and his age contributed to those fears of decline as well. Still, he was effective when healthy, remaining a standout for WHIP in particular. No one will mistake him for an ace in 2026, but he should be drafted in the middle rounds. –Scott White

    Normally, a hitter signing with the Mariners wouldn’t be the most favorable outcome given T-Mobile Park’s reputation as a pitcher-friendly venue. But Naylor didn’t have any problems there after coming over in a midseason trade with the Diamondbacks, batting .360 (32 for 89) with five homers and a 1.015 OPS in the Mariners’ home games.

    Moreover, the Mariners seemed to unlock the base-stealer in him. His 11 stolen bases in 93 games with the Diamondbacks were surprising enough, but then he had 19 in just 54 games with the Mariners. Given his 3rd percentile sprint speed, some other team might have put a stop to that, but the Mariners don’t seem to care. He was succeeding, after all. It’s doubtful he steals 30 again, which is why he remains only eighth in my first base rankings, but a return to the Mariners improves Naylor’s chances of remaining a base-stealer in some capacity. For more, check out Chris Towers’ full-length article. –Scott White

    Baseball Fantasy moves offseason Top tracker
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