Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

Sports

Fantasy Baseball Dynasty Stock Watch

Published

on

Fantasy Baseball Dynasty Stock Watch

With roughly six weeks in the books, we’ve nearly reached the one-quarter mark of the 2025 season, which makes it the ideal time to check in on a handful of the most impactful dynasty-related takeaways for fantasy managers. We’ve spent the last few weeks highlighting several under-the-radar prospects making early-season noise, but this week’s column takes a broader look at five over-arching storylines that emerged during the seemingly endless process of updating Rotoworld’s fantasy baseball dynasty rankings. A fresh dynasty rankings update is on tap for next week. In the meantime, please enjoy this week’s column as a table-setting appetizer.

MLB: New York Yankees at Cleveland Guardians

MLB: New York Yankees at Cleveland Guardians

2025 Fantasy Baseball Rankings: Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani & Bobby Witt Jr. lead Top 300 rest of season ranks

Advertisement

With Triston Casas done for the season, Romy González has joined the top 300.

Aaron Judge has ascended to top-five status for dynasty ranking purposes

It’s not hyperbolic to suggest that Aaron Judge is putting together the most impressive sustained hot streak of his career, which is incredible considering he’s eclipsed 58 home runs in two of the last three seasons. The 33-year-old franchise cornerstone is slashing an astronomical .400/.491/.750 with a major league-leading 12 homers and 34 RBI through 37 games. He’s on pace to finish as the top player in the fantasy landscape from a re-draft standpoint and reach the 50-homer threshold for the third time in four years.

Judge checked in at 13th overall in Rotoworld’s dynasty rankings update back Opening Day. He’s likely going to crack the top five in our next installment alongside Bobby Witt Jr. and Shohei Ohtani. There are compelling age-related cases for slotting younger superstars like Juan Soto, Elly De La Cruz, Gunnar Henderson, Jackson Chourio or Corbin Carroll ahead of him, but we’re fully prepared to assume the long-term physical risks with Judge in exchange for his current production, which is head-and-shoulder above his peers through six weeks of the 2025 campaign.

The gap between MLB and Triple-A is wider than ever

Witnessing the ongoing struggles of consensus top-ranked prospects Roki Sasaki, Matt Shaw, Jasson Domínguez, Nick Kurtz, Cam Smith, Coby Mayo, Jackson Jobe, Chase Dollander and Kumar Rocker at the highest level is further proof that making the leap to the big leagues remains the most challenging adjustment period in a player’s career. The common link between most of these struggling top prospects is how quickly they ascended to the big leagues, but that doesn’t apply in all cases. There are several hitters — most notably Shaw, Mayo and Alan Roden (who was optioned back to Triple-A earlier this week) — who have extensive multi-year track records of success in the upper minors.

Advertisement

There are some notable exceptions here with Kristian Campbell, Jacob Wilson and Chandler Simpson standing out as prominent youngsters making instant impact for fantasy managers, but they’re relative outliers in comparison to their peers. The biggest takeaway here for dynasty managers is to expect some initial turbulence for most prospects as they adjust to everyday life in the majors, but to remain patient with elite talents. The trajectory of Nationals top prospect Dylan Crews is a prominent example of this phenomenon as he appears to have overcome an ice-cold 5-for-47 start to the season to finally start to find his footing in recent weeks.

There’s a new ‘big three’ headlining the next wave of prospect talent

One of the biggest questions for dynasty managers entering the season was whether teenage prodigies Jesús Made and Leo De Vries would join Sebastian Walcott to headline the next wave of elite prospects. They’ve lived up to the stratospheric hype through six weeks in the minors as one of the youngest hitters in the Carolina and Midwest Leagues, respectively.

Made has checked every metaphorical box in his stateside debut as a switch-hitting 18-year-old phenom this season, hitting .296/.404/.455 with seven extra-base hits and nine steals through 22 games for Low-A Carolina. He continues to record elite batted ball data relative to his age and experience and looks like a potential five-category fantasy superstar in the making. The hype is real.

Meanwhile, De Vries’ meteoric rise has continued this season with an astronomical .308/.402/.560 triple-slash line with 12 extra-base hits and three steals through 24 contests for High-A Fort Wayne. The precocious 18-year-old put together one of the greatest performances of the season back on April 22 when he launched two homers while hitting for the cycle as part of a sublime five-hit explosion.

We’d be remiss if we excluded Pirates sensation Konnor Griffin, who has five homers and 12 steals through 25 games for Low-A Bradenton this season in his professional debut, from this conversation as a contender to reach top-five prospect status in the coming months. However, it’s abundantly clear that Walcott, Made and De Vries are a notch above the rest of the prospect landscape right now.

No starting pitcher is ‘safe’ in the modern era

This isn’t a stunning revelation for dynasty managers that have been playing fantasy baseball for any length of time, but it feels even more resonant this year with a handful of relatively durable ace-caliber fantasy aces either hitting the shelf or dealing with lingering physical issues in the early stages of the year with the most prominent examples including Logan Gilbert (elbow), Corbin Burnes (shoulder), George Kirby (shoulder) and Shota Imanaga (hamstring). We’ve also had several upper-echelon starters dealing with injury scares lately including Cole Ragans (groin), Cristopher Sánchez (forearm), Hunter Greene (groin), Freddy Peralta (groin) and Dylan Cease (forearm) as teams refuse to take any chances with the long-term health of their frontline starters.

Advertisement

We haven’t even waded into the high-risk department with premium talents like Spencer Strider (hamstring), Shane McClanahan (triceps), Grayson Rodriguez (elbow, lat), Tyler Glasnow (shoulder), Blake Snell (shoulder) and Jared Jones (elbow) facing extended absences.

The main takeaway here for dynasty managers is to prioritize upside and embrace the volatility of the era when it comes to roster construction decisions. No starting pitching prospect is a safe investment from a long-term standpoint, but placing a greater emphasis on acquiring raw talents with a wider range of potential outcomes seems preferable to lower-upside arms that don’t necessarily guarantee greater volume once they reach the majors. They’re not for the risk-averse among us, but high-upside pitching prospects like Bubba Chandler, Andrew Painter, Chase Burns, Jacob Misiorowski and Noah Schultz are becoming less risky propositions than a half-decade ago.

Jac Caglianone is the most challenging prospect to rank for dynasty purposes

Caglianone’s gargantuan tape-measure homers have made him the talk of the Texas League during the first six weeks of the season as he’s recorded an astronomical .330/.409/.598 triple-slash line with eight homers, 31 RBI and one steal through 29 games for Double-A Northwest Arkansas. The 22-year-old slugging prospect’s off-the-metaphorical-charts raw power is going to make him fantasy-relevant the second he reaches the majors. He’s a potential fantasy superstar if everything comes together, but there are some lingering questions whether he’ll make enough frequent hard contact at the highest level, especially since he’s striking out nearly a quarter of the time at the Double-A level. That’s not atrocious, but he’s going to have to adjust to facing big-league caliber pitchers for the first time in his career, which could lead to some initial struggles.

The critical takeaway for fantasy managers to note is that he’s making strides with his defense in right field, which is that variable that could expedite his timeline to the big leagues. He figures to arrive in Kansas City at some point in the second half, but he’ll make it challenging for the Royals front office to keep him in the minors by continuing to launch tape-measure moonshots. There’s enough realistic upside here for dynasty managers to consider him a top-15 range prospect until further notice, but there remains an extremely wide range of potential outcomes. The sizzling-hot start to the season is a positive development and fantasy managers should be willing to embrace the risk here.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

VYPE HOU 2025 Volleyball Setter of the Year Fan Poll

Published

on


Keep reading…Show less



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Central’s Brown named conference men’s runner of the week

Published

on


PELLA— Winning the mile in his first action of the indoor season, Central College men’s track and field junior Jack Brown (Norwalk) was named the American Rivers Conference Track Events Performer of the Week Monday.
           
Brown’s mile time clocked in at 4 minutes, 7.80 seconds at the Frigid Bee Opener hosted by St. Ambrose University on Saturday. He won the race by 4.87 seconds and currently has the top time in Division III.
           
Central hosts the Dutch Holiday Preview on Friday, December 12 inside the H.S. Kuyper Fieldhouse.
 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Limestone’s Mia Lamberti repeats as Volleyball Player of the Year

Published

on


Dec. 9, 2025, 3:00 a.m. CT

Limestone High School junior Mia Lamberti is the 2025 Journal Star Volleyball Player of the Year, the second year in a row for the University of Illinois commit.

Limestone High School junior Mia Lamberti is the 2025 Journal Star Volleyball Player of the Year, the second year in a row for the University of Illinois commit.

MATT DAYHOFF/JOURNAL STAR



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

FSC Athletics Update – December 8

Published

on



FARMINGDALE, N.Y. | The Skyline Conference released its weekly winter reports Monday, and Farmingdale State College men’s basketball junior forward Kentrell Evans (Brooklyn, N.Y.) was tabbed to its honorable mention listing.

SAAC Toys for Tots Drive Wraps Up This Week

The Farmingdale State College Student-Athlete Advisory Committee’s annual Toys for Tots Drive continues this week, with collection boxes set up in the Nold Hall lobby through the coming weekend. Students, faculty, staff and fans are encouraged to donate new, unwrapped toys for the annual initiative conducted nationwide by the United States Marine Corps, including Wednesday’s men’s basketball game versus Swarthmore at 7 p.m., along with Saturday’s noontime women’s basketball contest against Old Westbury.

Men’s Basketball (6-2) | Skyline Report

Farmingdale State registered an 86-76 road win Wednesday at SUNY New Paltz, before falling at national finalist NYU on Saturday afternoon, 84-68.

Evans averaged 17 points and 10 rebounds per game during the stretch, including a double-double in Wednesday’s victory over the Hawks and a career-high 18 points on the weekend against the Violets, while shooting 70 percent (14-of-20) from the field.

Following Wednesday’s 7 p.m. non-conference tilt at home versus Swarthmore College, the Rams will begin Skyline play on the road Saturday in a noontime start at Old Westbury.

Women’s Basketball (3-4, 2-3 Skyline) | Skyline Report

FSC dropped a 66-64 decision at home Wednesday night to Skyline foe Purchase College, before capturing a 64-56 win Saturday at defending conference champion Mount Saint Mary – the Rams’ first victory over the Knights since 2017.

Senior point guard Shyann Parker (Floral Park, N.Y.) scored a career-high 25 points midweek against Purchase, before junior guard Mia Simmons (Queens, N.Y.) led the Rams with 16 in Saturday’s triumph.

Following Tuesday’s 6 p.m. Skyline game at Mount Saint Vincent, Farmingdale State will play host to Old Westbury on Saturday at noon.

Indoor Track and Field

Farmingdale State’s men’s and women’s indoor track and field teams got underway Friday at the Fastrack Season Opener in Staten Island, with junior men’s thrower Adonias Mercado (Hillsdale, N.Y.) recording a first-place effort in the shot put with a mark of 15.86m (52-0.5). His effort was good for the second-best mark in school history.

The Rams next compete Friday and Saturday in New Haven, Conn., at the Art Kadish Elm City Challenge.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Florida volleyball’s Alexis Stucky enters transfer portal

Published

on


Florida setter Alexis Stucky has entered the transfer portal, sources told On3.

Stucky was named to the 2025 All-SEC Second Team and enters the portal as a grad transfer.

Transfer portal background information

The NCAA Transfer Portal, which covers every NCAA sport at the Division I, II and III levels, is a private database with names of student-athletes who wish to transfer. It is not accessible to the public.

The process of entering the portal is done through a school’s compliance office. Once a player provides written notification of an intent to transfer, the office enters the player’s name in the database and everything is off and running. The compliance office has 48 hours to comply with the player’s request and that request cannot be refused.

Once a player’s name shows up in the portal, other schools can contact the player. Players can change their minds at any point and withdraw from the portal. However, once a player enters the portal, the current scholarship no longer has to be honored. In other words, if a player enters the portal but decides to stay, the school is not obligated to provide a scholarship anymore.

The database is a normal database, sortable by a variety of topics, including (of course) sport and name. A player’s individual entry includes basic details such asynchronous contact info, whether the player was on scholarship and whether the player is transferring as a graduate student.

A player can ask that a “do not contact” tag be placed on the report. In those instances, the players don’t want to be contacted by schools unless they’ve initiated the communication.

Track transfer portal activity

While the NCAA Transfer Portal database is private, the On3 Network has streamlined the reporting process tracking player movement. If you find yourself asking, ‘How can I track transfer portal activity?’ our well-established network of reporters and contacts across college athletics keeps you up to speed in several ways, from articles written about players as they enter and exit the transfer portal or find their new destination, to our social media channels, to the On3 Transfer Portal.

The transfer portal wire provides a real-time feed of player activity, including basic player profile information, transfer portal ranking and original On3 Industry recruiting ranking, as well as NIL valuation (name, image and likeness).

The On3 Transfer Portal Rankings allow for you to filter the On3 Industry Rankings to find the best of the best in the portal, starting with Overall Top Players. 

The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

The Mind-Boggling History Behind Stanford’s Almost 50-Year Run of NCAA Titles

Published

on


Monday night in Kansas City, the Stanford women’s soccer team plays Florida State for the NCAA championship. If the No. 1 seed Cardinal win, the most remarkable streak in college sports reaches a half-century milestone.

On Nov. 28, 1976, Stanford beat UCLA for the men’s water polo national title. Every school year since then, the Cardinal have won at least one natty. This year, 2025–26, they are trying to make it 50 straight on The Farm.

As you might imagine, this streak is completely without peer in college sports annals. The second-longest in history is 19 years by USC from 1959–60 through 1977–78. The second-longest active streak is North Carolina with seven straight years.

When Stanford won that water polo title, current NCAA president Charlie Baker was a sophomore on the junior varsity basketball team at Harvard and the Cardinal’s conference was the Pac-8. If you told anyone on campus then that the school would end up joining the Atlantic Coast Conference, you’d have been suspected of using psychedelics.

The championships have come like clockwork, and sometimes they come in bunches. Twice, in 1996–97 and 2018–19, Stanford won six titles in a single academic year. Three times—in 1996, 2003 and 2019—the Cardinal won championships in two different sports on the same day.

It’s just different there, where excellence is the expectation both academically and athletically, and in a vast array of different sports. Twenty different programs have won NCAA titles: women’s tennis (20 of them), men’s tennis (17), women’s swimming (11), men’s water polo (11), women’s water polo (10), men’s gymnastics (10), women’s volleyball (nine), men’s swimming (eight), men’s golf (eight), women’s cross country (five), men’s cross country (four), men’s outdoor track and field (four), women’s basketball (three), women’s golf (three), women’s rowing (three), women’s soccer (three), men’s soccer (three), men’s volleyball (two), baseball (two) and men’s basketball (one).

(The big-revenue, glamour sports are a bit of a different story. Stanford has been successful for long stretches in football and men’s basketball, but the only national championship for either of those programs came in men’s hoops in 1942.) 

Some of the most famous names in American sports were part of team national titles at Stanford: John McEnroe in men’s tennis; Katie Ledecky in women’s swimming; Pablo Morales in men’s swimming; Jennifer Azzi in women’s basketball; Hall of Famer Mike Mussina and Cy Young winner Jack McDowell in baseball; water polo star Maggie Steffens; and so on. (Tiger Woods won an individual golf national title, but not a team championship.) The U.S. Olympic teams are routinely populated by Cardinal athletes.

Katie Ledecky led the Cardinal to back-to-back women’s swimming championship during a decorated career.

Katie Ledecky led the Cardinal to back-to-back women’s swimming championship during a decorated career. / Donald Miralle/Sports Illustrated

The school’s 137 total NCAA titles are the most in history, outdistancing UCLA (124) and USC (115). From there it drops off to Texas at 60. Stanford has a wider distance in women’s natties over the competition with 67 to runner-up UCLA’s 45.

It’s true that Stanford casts a wider net than virtually anyone else, sponsoring 36 varsity sports (15 men, 19 women, two co-ed). But the ability to excel in so many of them over such a long period of time speaks to a school culture that embraces athletics as opposed to tolerating it, as some of the more high-powered academic schools do. With an undergraduate enrollment of about 8,000, the percentage of athletes in the student body is quite high.

Climate, facilities and the allure of graduating with a high-powered degree attract elite athletes across a broad spectrum. But the realities of modern college sports have challenged Stanford’s sustainability—this is not a school that works well in the transfer portal, given the academic strictures of gaining admission, and it has been playing from behind in the NIL market.

Nothing underscores Stanford’s struggles there more than two transfers to nouveau riche Texas Tech. Softball pitcher NiJaree Canady helped the Cardinal to the Women’s College World Series Final Four in 2023 and ’24, then made a big-money transfer to Tech and led the Red Raiders to a runner-up finish last spring. Then defensive end David Bailey was a dominant player at Stanford for three years before transferring to Texas Tech and helping the Red Raiders to the current College Football Playoff.

Along the way, Stanford has lost its forever grip on the Learfield Directors’ Cup, the annual all-sports championship for the best athletic department. From 1994–95 through 2018–19, the school won every year. The COVID-19 pandemic interrupted that run, and jarred Stanford’s primacy. Since then, Texas has won it four times and Stanford once. Last year the Cardinal finished third, their lowest finish in the Cup’s 31-year history.

New athletic director John Donahoe has been tasked with modernizing the department after replacing longtime AD Bernard Muir. Donahoe has a business background, having previously worked at Nike and elsewhere in the private sector. The football program is getting a makeover under general manager Andrew Luck, a former star quarterback at the school and in the NFL as well.

Yet even in changing times, Stanford’s title string has endured to this point. 

The women’s soccer team has the best chance of extending it to 50 years among the fall sports, entering the NCAA tournament with a 16-1-2 record and reeling off five straight wins by a combined score of 22–5. Stanford defeated Florida State, 2–1, during the regular season in Tallahassee.

But if the Cardinal don’t get it done Monday night, there are more opportunities to come. The No. 2-seeded women’s volleyball team has advanced to the Sweet 16 of that tournament and will face Wisconsin on Friday. Winter and spring sports should have multiple national title contenders as well.

At most schools, a single national title at any point in time is a historic event. At Stanford, it has been an annual happening since shortly after Jimmy Carter won the 1976 presidential election. Nobody has ever done it better, for longer, with greater consistency.

More College Football from Sports Illustrated

Listen to SI’s new college sports podcast, Others Receiving Votes, below or on Apple and Spotify. Watch the show on SI’s YouTube channel.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending