Sports
Fantasy baseball pickups

High-ceiling players aren’t abundant on fantasy free agent lists at this stage of the season. With the exception of the handful of top prospects who might be recalled later in the week for late-season auditions — more on that in a moment — it’s imperative that fantasy managers scoop up any player with even a chance at performing at an elite level for them during these critical, upcoming weeks.
Regarding those prospects — Sam Basallo, Bubba Chandler, Andrew Painter and J.J. Wetherholt among such promotion candidates — bear in mind that Aug. 15 is an important date on the baseball calendar, as it marks 45 days remaining on the regular-season calendar. That’s the maximum number for a player to retain rookie eligibility into the following season, though players must also accrue fewer than 130 at-bats and 50 innings pitched to remain eligible. That’s why we saw prospects like Dylan Crews and Jace Jung recalled after that point last year, and it’s why we might see a handful — Basallo and fellow Baltimore Orioles prospect Dylan Beavers, as well as Painter being heavily rumored — promoted similarly in the coming days.
Putting that aside, among high-ceiling, widely available players already in the majors, here are four you should be adding everywhere:
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Luke Keaschall, 2B, Minnesota Twins (available in 83.7%): The Twins’ house cleaning created numerous opportunities for players within their minor league system, but Keaschall is by far the most interesting of those effectively handed everyday roles. Kiley McDaniels’ No. 3 Twins prospect, Keaschall lasted only one week into his first taste of the big leagues in April, suffering a fractured right forearm after being hit by an 86.8 mph sinker from Kyle Hendricks that sidelined him for the next three months. Since activation, Keaschall has delivered four multi-hit, multi-RBI performances in his first five games, batting in the middle of the Twins’ reworked batting order. He brings elite plate discipline and well above-average speed to the table, things that should suit him as well in standard points-based as rotisserie leagues, and he gets enough lift in his swing that he could grow into more power.
Edward Cabrera, SP, Miami Marlins (available in 55.6%): There’s no way he can be left out there in any fantasy league, regardless of how you feel about his Marlins’ competitive state down the stretch or the team’s concerns for his late-season workload. Cabrera has been a sensation for the team all season, but especially since the beginning of July, as his 124 fantasy points in seven starts during that time span trail only Cristopher Sanchez (144) and Nathan Eovaldi (130). What has made the difference for Cabrera has been vastly improved control, largely from diversification of his pitch repertoire (specifically, fewer four-seam fastballs and more sinkers and sliders), as his 62.8% first pitch strike, 49.5% zone and 7.9% walk rates are easily his best in any of his five big-league seasons. His curveball and slider are both nasty (40%-plus whiff rate with each), and to the questions about team competitiveness and workload, his Marlins are only six games out of a wild card spot and he has a reasonable total of 115 innings, after 128 in 2023 and 119 in 2024.
Gavin Williams, SP, Cleveland Guardians (available in 61.6%): His season got off to a lackluster start, but since the beginning of June he has been one of the better starters out there. His 167 fantasy points in 12 starts during that time ranks 13th-best among all pitchers, and he has eight quality starts (including in each of his past four outings) during that time. Williams’ control could stand to improve, as his 12.6% walk rate would be easily his worst in any of his four professional seasons, but he’s dialing up his four-seam fastball to a career-best 96.7 mph on average, and his sweeper has transformed into a nasty, out-getting pitch (44 of his 123 K’s and a 41.1% whiff rate). McDaniel’s No. 33 overall prospect entering his 2023 debut season, Williams might well remain a top-25 fantasy starter the rest of the way.
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Zebby Matthews, SP, Minnesota Twins (available in 95.3%): The sleeper of this bunch, Keaschall’s teammate now appears locked into the team’s rotation for the duration, especially since he has totaled only 75 professional innings this season after 105 1/3 in 2023 and 134 2/3 last year. Matthews’ 5.17 ERA might appear unsavory, but examining his underlying numbers, he’s pitching far better than you might realize. Over the past three weeks, he’s one of only 51 pitchers to score 15-plus fantasy points in a start twice, and his 12.3 per-start average in the category ranks 32nd among pitchers with at least as many as his three starts. Matthews is also showing good control and command of all his pitches, with the lights-out slider (28-of-48 K’s, 43.5% whiff rate) that should continue to fill the strikeout column.
Two-start pitcher to add
Will Warren, SP, New York Yankees (available in 80.0%): Matthews’ Monday opponent, Warren should benefit from the favorable matchup against the reworked Twins lineup, and his second turn is another plus matchup at St. Louis’ pitching-friendly Busch Stadium. While Warren’s Yankees might be mired in an extended funk, he has pitched effectively during that stretch, with a 3.55 ERA in his past 11 starts.
Deeper league pickups
Editor’s Picks

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Cade Cavalli, SP, Washington Nationals (available in 95.4%): Michael Soroka‘s trade to the Chicago Cubs paved the way for Cavalli, a onetime top-100 prospect who succumbed to 2023 Tommy John surgery, to finally get another chance, almost three years to the date of his Aug. 26, 2022, big-league debut. Though Cavalli’s 2025 work with Triple-A Rochester had been lackluster (6.09 ERA in 15 starts there), he tossed 4 1/3 innings of shutout, six-strikeout baseball in his return start for the Nationals last Wednesday. In that outing, he flashed a 97.3 mph fastball and got eight swinging strikes with his knuckle curve, illustrating the excellence of his raw stuff. It was more than enough to warrant a pickup in NL-only and deep mixed leagues.
Hurston Waldrep, SP, Atlanta Braves (available in 93.6%): Granted a pair of fill-in starts over the past week and a half due to scheduling quirks resulting from prior postponements, Waldrep excelled for the Braves, totaling 11 2/3 innings, two runs allowed and 10 strikeouts to earn a pair of wins. The Braves subsequently announced their plans to keep him in their rotation, perhaps at the expense of Carlos Carrasco or Erick Fedde, and with the team looking ahead to 2026, they might keep him in there while bumping both veterans after Chris Sale‘s eventual return. Waldrep’s splitter was a sensation in those games, generating nine of his 10 K’s as well as a 50.0% whiff rate, with the pitch’s improvement alone making him well worth a pickup.
Sports
Pitt volleyball advances to NCAA regional final with sweep against Minnesota
Sports
Jayhawks Head Back to Sweet 16, Prepare for Unbeaten Nebraska
“I am excited to be in this environment, and I am really excited for our team,” Head Coach Matt Ulmer said. “It has been a great year for us, marked by a lot of growth. To be here in the second weekend and to face a program as strong as Nebraska is a real honor, and it is something this group has worked toward all season.”
The Jayhawks now face top-seeded Nebraska, which enters the regional at 32–0 with one of the nation’s most efficient statistical profiles.
Kansas leans on its defensive identity, holding opponents to a .094 hitting percentage, the second-best mark in the country. The Jayhawks also average 15.29 digs per set, ranking 10th nationally, and use that back-row consistency to extend rallies and generate transition swings.
Offensively, Kansas averages 13.35 kills and 12.35 assists per set with 33.86 attacks per frame, a volume that helps sustain pressure throughout long possessions. The team’s 1.57 aces per set rank third in the Big 12 and provide key momentum swings.
Nebraska counters with one of the most complete lineups in the field, averaging 14.72 kills and 13.50 assists per set while adding 2.72 blocks. The Huskers’ size, pace and efficiency have powered an undefeated season and present a significant challenge at the net.
Friday’s matchup features two teams that excel defensively but differ in style. Kansas relies on discipline, ball control and rally creation, while Nebraska leans on physicality and terminal attacking. The Jayhawks will look to lean on their serve, first contact and extended-rally strengths as they attempt to upset the tournament’s top seed.
The matchup is set for 8:30 p.m. CT, or 30 minutes following the first match, and can be watched on ESPN2 or followed through live stats here.
Sports
Two Collect Major Awards as Women’s Volleyball Earns Two All-ECAC Selections
DANBURY, Conn. (12/11/25) – Freshman Ashley Torok has been named the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Division III Women’s Volleyball Rookie of the Year, while Head Coach Don Perkins has been selected the ECAC Division III Women’s Volleyball Coach of the Year as the Kean University Women’s Volleyball team earned two All-ECAC selections. Cayley Elena Morrison and Aspen O’Brien were both selected to the second team.
Torok earns Rookie of the Year honors and her first All-ECAC selection after totaling 502 points, 433 kills, 244 digs and 52 aces over 114 sets played. The rookie averaged 4.40 points per set, 3.80 kills per set and 2.14 digs per set over 34 matches as she was named AVCA Region IV Rookie of the Year and an Honorable Mention All-American selection. Torok becomes the first player in program history to capture a major award from the Conference.
Perkins earns his first-ever ECAC Coach of the Year accolade after guiding the Cougars to 30 wins, an NJAC Championship and an NCAA Tournament appearance. Kean also captured an NJAC Regular Season title and won their first-ever game in the NCAA Tournament. The AVCA Region IV Coach of the Year had five All-NJAC selections, five All-Region selections and three All-Americans. Those numbers include two NJAC major awards and two regional awards.
Morrison earns her first All-ECAC selection after totaling 464 points, 382 kills and 119 blocks over 110 sets played. The middle hitter averaged 4.22 points per game, 3.47 kills per set and 1.08 blocks per set over 34 matches as she was named NJAC Defensive Player of the Year and an AVCA Second Team All-American.
O’Brien earns her first All-ECAC selection after totaling 1184 assists, 217 digs and 128 points over 112 sets played. The setter averaged 10.57 assists per set over 34 matches as she was named the NJAC Player of the Year, the AVCA Region IV Player of the Year and an AVCA Second Team All-American.
Sports
Elite Performance Lifts #11 Creighton Volleyball to Regional Final
Courtesy of Rob Anderson, Creighton Athletics
LEXINGTON, KY — Seniors Ava Martin, Annalea Maeder, and Kiara Reinhardt helped No. 11 Creighton Volleyball to a second straight Regional Final with a 3-1 win over No. 8 Arizona State on Thursday afternoon at historic Memorial Coliseum in Lexington, Ky.
Scores of the match were 26-24, 19-25, 25-13, 25-18.
Creighton led 10-7 and 11-8 early before Arizona State countered with a 7-2 run to take a 15-13 lead into the media timeout after back-to-back aces by Brynn Covell. The Jays regrouped, getting a kill from Jaya Johnson and two more by Kiara Reinhardt to move in front 20-18. The teams continued to trade 3-0 runs, as after falling behind 21-20, Creighton bounced back with three of its own to move in front 23-21 on Sydney Breissinger’s serve. ASU tied it up at 23-all before Johnson went line to earn the Jays a set point opportunity at 24-23. Noemie Glover put down a kill to extend the set, but a service error and a Martin kill gave CU the 26-24 set. Martin owned seven kills in 11 errorless swings to pace a Bluejay offense that hit .333. Maeder dished 17 assists and Breissinger had six digs for CU. Glover topped the Sun Devils with five kills.
CU led much of the second set before a 4-0 Arizona State gave the Sun Devils a 17-14 lead. The Sun Devils led by two or more the rest of the way, closing out the 25-19 victory with back-to-back blocks to even the match heading into intermission. Martin had nine kills in the second frame and Breissinger 10 digs, but it wasn’t enough to offset six kills from Glover and five kills by Kiylah Presley. ASU hit .368 in the second set and would side out at 70 percent clip.
The Bluejays bolted to a 9-3 lead to open the third set and stayed in control throughout, hitting .600 in a 25-13 rout. With all the focus on Martin, it was six kills from Reinhardt and three by Johnson that did the trick. Johnson served her first ace since October 17th to close out the set. The .600 hitting percentage was CU’s best ever in an NCAA Tournament set.
A pair of aces from Breissinger helped CU to a 3-0 lead to open the fourth game, and the Jays posted a second straight wire-to-wire victory. Martin’s 22nd kill to make it 15-10 at the media timeout tied Jaali Winters’ career NCAA Tournament record with 175.
Martin led CU with 23 kills, while Maeder had 55 assists and 15 digs. Reinhardt had 14 kills on .722 hitting, while Johnson added 12 kills of her own and Breissinger dug a career-high 20 balls. CU finished the match with 65 kills, 57 digs, eight aces and six blocks on .370 hitting.
Glover topped ASU with 17 kills and Henry dished out 26 assists while Omaha native Faith Frame collecting a team-high 15 balls. ASU closed the match with 50 kills, 48 digs, 4 aces and seven blocks on .273 hitting.
With the win, Creighton (28-5) advances to play the winner of this afternoon’s Cal Poly/Kentucky match on Saturday night on ESPN2 for a spot in the Final Four. A start time for that match will be announced later this evening. The Big 12 champions, Arizona State ends its season with a 28-4 mark.
NOTES:Kiara Reinhardt set a program record by playing in her 12th career NCAA Tournament match, while tying another mark with her 11th NCAA Tournament start … Ava Martin became the third player in CU history with 500 or more kills in a season … Arizona State libero Faith Frame is an Omaha native and the sister of former Creighton Softball player Ensley Frame … Creighton has won 23 straight matches, tied for its second-longest win streak in program history … Creighton is now 20-14 all-time in the NCAA Tournament, including a 3-2 record in the Regional Semifinals … Creighton has won eight straight matches against Big 12 Conference teams, including a 3-0 mark this season … Creighton has won 28 or more matches seven times now, all since 2012 … Creighton Volleyball has joined men’s soccer (in 2002-03, 2011-12 and 2014-15) as the only programs in the history of Creighton Athletics to make back-to-back Elite Eights … Brian Rosen joined former men’s soccer coach Elmar Bolowich as the second head coach in the history of Creighton Athletics to take his first team to the Elite Eight. Rosen also joined Bolowich as the only coaches in CU history to win his first three NCAA Tournament games … Creighton’s 89 victories since the start of the 2023 season rank third-most nationally, trailing only Nebraska and Pittsburgh. Arizona State entered the today fourth on that list with 86 victories … Creighton improved to 5-2 all-time inside Memorial Coliseum with its fourth straight win in the historic facility … Arizona State fell to 0-8 in Regional Semifinals … Ava Martin had five or more kills for the 110th straight match and 10 or more kills for the 27th consecutive contest … Ava Martin (1,630) passed Leah Ratzlaff (1,622) for third-most kills in CU history … Ava Martin led or tied for the Creighton lead in kills for the 26th match in a row … Annalea Maeder had her 15th double-double of the season … Creighton improved to 6-0 when taking a 2-1 lead in a match … Annalea Maeder reached 4,000 career assists.
Sports
Nebraska volleyball readies for a Sweet 16 showdown with Kansas at home
No. 1 seed Nebraska volleyball hosts No. 4 Kansas in the Sweet 16 on Friday night.
The Huskers enter the match at 32-0 and the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. With all the success this season, junior outside hitter Harper Murray said the team is focusing on being grateful and staying present.
“Because if you look too far into the future, you’re probably going to get a little nervous and feel a little stressed out,” Murray said, “so (we’re) just really focusing on what we’re doing in the moment and focusing on where our feet are.”
Playing at home is a big advantage in the tournament, she added.
Junior middle blocker Andi Jackson echoed that sentiment.
“I think the whole team feeling like we can play free really helps me, because the whole vibe on the court, regardless of who’s in, you can just feel that there’s so much confidence,” Jackson said. “Obviously, if the team is feeling pressure, then you’re going to start to feel pressure for yourself.”
Jackson and Murray said the team’s difficult practices and preparation helps them play with confidence.
First-year head coach Dani Busboom Kelly, who coached in two national championship games at Louisville, acknowledged there’s pressure to follow through on the Cornhuskers’ high-level success this year.
“But I do think this team has a lot of experience with it,” Busboom Kelly said. “The staff has a lot of experience with it. So it’s nothing new, which I think helps to alleviate some of that.”
Busboom Kelly’s former team, No. 2 seed Louisville, will compete against No. 3 seed Texas A&M at 6 p.m. CT on Friday. That match will be played at the Bob Devaney Sports Center followed by the Huskers.
First serve between the Cornhuskers and Jayhawks is set for approximately 8:30 p.m. CT Friday. Both Sweet 16 matches will air on ESPN2.
Winners of the Louisville-Texas A&M match and the Nebraska-Kansas match will face off on Sunday for the right to go to the Final Four. Serve time is yet to be determined.
The Final Four will be played at T-Mobile Arena in downtown Kansas City on Dec. 18 and 21.
Sports
VUU track and field posts standout results at indoor opener | Richmond Free Press
Virginia Union University’s track and field teams opened the indoor season with a surge of early success, highlighted by multiple school records, event wins and breakout performances across two meets.
At the season opener, freshman Kornti Searles broke the indoor school record in the women’s weight throw, with fellow freshman Ellis Oshawnna moving to No. 2 all-time in the event. In the long jump, Angell Garrison and Taylor Porter opened their seasons with personal bests.
Freshman J’meriyon Osborne delivered the top men’s performance of the opener, winning the men’s open long jump ahead of 22 competitors in his collegiate debut. Timothy Butler broke the indoor school record in the weight throw and advanced to the finals, finishing sixth in a field of 29 athletes. In the invitational long jump, Jeremiah Palacious placed third with a collegiate-best mark of 23 feet, 6½ inches.
“The first day of the meet was a strong showing for both the men’s and women’s teams — a great way to kick off the season,” said Franck Charles, VUU head track and field coach.
The Panthers carried that momentum to Liberty University, where day two produced three more women’s school records.
Yamilet Cruz broke a 15-year-old school record in the shot put with a throw of 11.83 meters, surpassing Shakeema Browne’s 2010 mark. Abijah Jepkemboi set a new program record in the 5,000 meters with a time of 19:47, eclipsing the previous record set in 2017. Victoria Louis added the third record of the day, finishing the 300 meters in 42.08.
“Day two was another good day for our ladies as they broke three more school records,” Charles said. “Our women’s team is heading in the right direction and, in total, they’ve already shattered four school records this season.
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