Sutherland, Litchfield seal series for Australia in tight finish

Richa Ghosh starred with a 96 but India paid for poor catching and slowing down with the bat as they went on to lose by three runs

Himanshu Agrawal30-Dec-2023A total of 11 catches were dropped in Mumbai. First, India put down seven and as if to return the favour a bit, Australia spilled four. But Phoebe Litchfield took a stunner for the visitors when it mattered most, ending a crucial 88-run stand for India when they needed another 100 with 17 overs and eight wickets remaining. That went a long way in Australia scraping through by three runs in the second ODI, and with that, winning the series.The batter to be dismissed was Jemimah Rodrigues for 44, as Litchfield dived full stretch across to her right at short extra cover. Richa Ghosh, with whom Rodrigues had that stand, later made up for lost time to hit 96 from 117 balls after being 54 off 84 at one stage. But with the game still in the balance, and India requiring 41 more from 38 deliveries with six wickets in hand, even Ghosh’s catch was well intercepted by Litchfield while moving to her left in a packed off-side ring.That pretty much decided the outcome, as India paid for poor catching and slowing down with the bat. Although Ghosh sped up despite cramping, Georgia Wareham, who had dismissed Rodrigues, struck soon after to have Harmanpreet Kaur tickle behind to Alyssa Healy for 5. Ghosh tried to counterattack in a 47-run partnership for the fifth wicket with Deepti Sharma, but Australia kept striking at regular intervals, thus putting Deepti’s second ODI five-for in vain.Related

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India had a chance until as late as 47 overs into their chase, after which they were only 22 away. But Annabel Sutherland, who had already got Ghosh, held her nerve to concede just three singles and also remove Pooja Vastrakar, who was coming off a 47-ball 62 from 47 in the first ODI. India never got back on track after that, eventually leaving them wondering what would have been had all those catches gone to hand.For a few tense moments, that thought must have crossed Australia’s minds too, who had given Ghosh a life each on 0 and 36. The first one came from Litchfield herself, putting one down at first slip in the eighth over. Next, it was Sutherland who dropped one in the 27th. That allowed Ghosh to keep ticking steadily, as she avoided risks in a patient start to her innings where she hit just two boundaries from her first 52 deliveries.Even Rodrigues didn’t entirely seem busy at the other end, as the required run rate kept ticking over. But with the game well under India’s control, Litchfield struck like lightning and halted India’s calmly moving train. That, after she had hit 63 with the bat. Litchfield was the beneficiary on three of India’s seven drops, getting a life on 0, 9 and 15. Although she consumed 98 deliveries, it was a challenging pitch to bat on at the Wankhede Stadium, where the ball turned and gripped aplenty for Deepti.Richa Ghosh fell four short of her maiden ODI ton•BCCIIndia’s spinners applied the brakes in the middle overs, as Australia stumbled from 117 for 1 in the 24th over to 180 for 6 in the 40th. The slowdown happened once India bowled spin from both ends, although Deepti’s 5 for 38 stood in contrast to debutant Shreyanka Patil and Sneh Rana, who combined figures of 2 for 102 from their 20 overs.But while the spinners kept Australia quiet, Ellyse Perry kept the pace up. She had flicked and flashed her way to 28 from her first 23 balls. Perry eventually fell for 50 from 47, with Deepti ending her animated stay at the crease in the 24th over. That wicket started Australia’s slide, as Deepti then trapped Beth Mooney, who missed an attempted sweep off a quicker delivery.Patil too got into the wickets in the 34th over, when Litchfield got the toe end of the bat behind to Richa in an attempt to sweep. Rana also struck to get Ashleigh Gardner for 2, after which came Deepti’s best of the lot. She tossed one up enticingly at Tahlia McGrath in the 40th over. The ball dipped and landed just outside the off stump, turning in enough to smash into the stumps with McGrath unsure of whether to come forward or go back.At 180 for 6, Wareham and Sutherland briefly steadied Australia with a 36-run partnership, before Wareham chipped one off Deepti to Smriti Mandhana – who had dropped two catches earlier – at midwicket to start the 46th over.Four balls later, Deepti completed her five-for with a return catch of Sutherland. Australia were 219 for 8 with another 25 balls remaining, and Alana King made full use of that. She swung three sixes – and with that, the momentum – in an unbeaten 28 from 17 balls which helped Australia to 258. Thus, King’s knock, Litchfield and Perry’s fifties, and a lot of help from India took Australia to victory, with India yet to beat them in a bilateral ODI series.

São Paulo vence o Coritiba em jogo-treino em preparação para Copa Sul-Americana

MatériaMais Notícias

da bet nacional: O São Paulo enfrentou o Coritiba em jogo-treino nesta segunda-feira (27), no CT da Barra Funda, dando continuidade para a intertemporada que o clube enfrenta desde a eliminação contra o Água Santa nas quartas de final do Campeonato Paulista.

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da wazamba: Os clubes tiveram um acordo prévio para que não fossem divulgados os resultados e nem a escalação, mas apurações revelaram que o jogo-treino foi dividido em duas etapas. Uma delas com o elenco titular e a outra com os reservas.

Saiba o ranking dos clubes com maiores médias de público em 2023

Veja tabela do Campeonato Paulista

Desta forma, a primeira etapa teria terminado em 2 a 1 para o Coritiba, enquanto a segunda em 3 a 1 para o São Paulo. Ou seja, no agregado, o Tricolor teria vencido por 4 a 3. Entretanto, informações sobre escalações e autores dos gols ainda não foram divulgadas.

O São Paulo pode ter outro jogo-treino nesta sexta-feira (31). Ainda não há um adversário definido. O Tricolor segue nas preparações pensando nas primeiras etapas da Copa Sul-Americana e no Campeonato Brasileiro. Nesta segunda-feira (27), conhecerá os adversários do continental.

Chelsea hold talks with £29m defender who Filipe Luis called "exceptional"

Chelsea have already made contact and held talks with a Brazilian defender via his representatives, with manager Enzo Maresca looking to strengthen his squad in a variety of areas before his second full campaign in charge.

Chelsea set to "go big" on multiple positions this summer

The west Londoners are very much competing for a place in next season’s Champions League with a top four finish well and truly in the realms of possibility, but the last two months have taught us that there is still plenty of work to do on the Chelsea squad for next season.

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Barney Lane

Mar 3, 2025

Chelsea have lost three out of their last five Premier League games whilst being knocked out of both domestic cups recently, with BlueCo already looking ahead to 2025/2026 as Maresca attempts to galvanise a strong finish to the campaign.

Chelsea’s next five Premier League fixtures

Date

Leicester City (home)

March 9th

Arsenal (away)

March 16th

Tottenham (home)

April 2nd

Brentford (away)

April 5th

Ipswich Town (home)

April 12th

It is believed that Chelsea are set to “go big” on signing a defender, midfielder and forward this summer, according to reliable journalist Simon Phillips, and there is some optimism that they could look to bring in a new full-back.

“Our top SPTC source has heard this weekend that Chelsea are ‘going big’ for a new goalkeeper, centre back, and a striker in the summer transfer window,” wrote Phillips, via his Substack.

Chelsea manager EnzoMarescalooks dejected after the match

“He also mentions other positions such as a new full back, but we have no definitive news on that just yet.”

A lot of the noise has centered around Chelsea’s pursuit of a central defender, with Crystal Palace star Marc Guehi among Maresca’s key targets, but a right-back may also be possible.

Reece James finds himself on the treatment table consistently with injury problems, leaving Maresca with just Malo Gusto and makeshift alternatives to the £250,000-per-week defender.

Reece James in action for Chelsea

Chelsea could look to reinforce that area of the squad as a result, with Stamford Bridge officials recently raiding Brazil for talent. Now, as per South American news outlet RTI Esporte, their attention has turned towards Flamengo defender Wesley Franca.

The 21-year-old, who can also play as a right-midfielder, is a target for many Premier League sides and Chelsea are no exception.

Chelsea hold talks with Flamengo defender Wesley Franca via his camp

As per RTI Esporte, Chelsea have approached Franca’s camp for talks ahead of the summer window, but they face stiff competition from Arsenal, Tottenham, Liverpool, Manchester United and Newcastle.

Wesley Franca celebrates for Flamengo.

All of these sides, bar Manchester City, who also hold an interest, have all contacted the player to gauge conditions of a potential deal before the next campaign. Franca’s reputation across the Atlantic is growing, but Flamengo would sell for a fee of around £29 million.

Meanwhile, ex-Chelsea defender Filipe Luis has branded France as a player with “no ceiling” in a serious endorsement of his teammate.

“He’s the kind of player who will decide where he wants to play come June,” said Luis. “There’s no ceiling for this kid; he’s exceptional.”

Tata extends IPL title sponsorship deal till 2028

The Tata Group has extended its title sponsorship of the IPL for another five years, from 2024 to 2028, for INR 2500 crore (US$301 million approx.), making it the “highest-ever sponsorship amount in the history of the league,” a BCCI statement said. The group were the IPL title sponsors in 2022 and 2023, and are also the title sponsors of the Women’s Premier League (WPL).”The collaboration with TATA Group for the title sponsorship of IPL 2024-28 is a significant milestone in IPL’s journey,” IPL chairman Arun Singh Dhumal said. “The record-breaking sum of INR 2500 crore by TATA Group is a testament to the immense value and appeal that the IPL holds in the world of sports.”This unprecedented amount not only sets a new benchmark in the history of the league but also reaffirms the IPL’s position as a premier sporting event with global impact. TATA Group’s commitment to cricket and sports is truly commendable, and we look forward to scaling new heights together and providing fans with unparalleled cricketing entertainment.”The Tata Group had replaced Vivo as IPL title sponsors for the last two seasons. The BCCI had temporarily severed ties with Vivo, a Chinese mobile and technology company, following political tensions between India and China in June 2020. Vivo had originally bagged the title sponsorship for 2018 to 2022 for INR 2199 crores (US $341 million approx. at the time), but for the 2020 season, it was replaced by Dream 11, before Vivo returned for the 2021 season.Tata’s bid for the next five years is a 13.7% jump over what Vivo had paid for 2018-22.”This collaboration embodies the spirit of growth, innovation, and a mutual dedication to excellence,” BCCI secretary Jay Shah said. “The unprecedented financial commitment reflects the immense scale and global impact of the IPL on the international sports stage.”The 2024 IPL will be played from March 22 and run till the end of May, just before the men’s T20 World Cup kicks off on June 1.

Celtic already sold "outstandingly basic" McGregor upgrade for just £1.5m

Celtic have had mixed success in the Scottish Premiership since the club returned to action after the final international break of the 2024/25 campaign.

The Hoops made a fast start to the last stretch of the season when they hammered Hearts 3-0 at Parkhead in their first game after the break, thanks to two goals from Daizen Maeda and one from Jota.

However, they followed that up by being beaten by bottom-of-the-league St. Johnstone away in the Premiership in their most recent match on Sunday.

It was a disappointing performance and result for the Hoops, who could have little complaints about the scoreline after they failed to produce the kind of quality supporters have become used to seeing from them in the final third.

The difference in Callum McGregor’s performance between the two matches illustrated the difference in Celtic’s play, and why the former Scotland international is so integral to Brendan Rodgers’ style of play.

Why Callum McGregor is integral for Celtic

In the 3-0 win over Hearts, the left-footed star completed a staggering 99% of his attempted passes – making 66 of 67 – and assisted Maeda for the opening goal with a through ball that split open the Jam Tarts defence.

The Scottish ace also won two of his three physical duels during the match, whilst also making two interceptions, and was not dribbled past a single time by an opposition player, which shows that he excelled in and out of possession.

Callum McGregor

This meant that McGregor was able to impact the game at both ends of the pitch, by effectively screening in front of the back four and using his quality on the ball to create the opening goal.

Against St. Johnstone, however, the captain played the full 90 minutes and did not create a single chance for his teammates despite having 79 touches of the ball and completing 94% of his passes.

Minutes

64

90

Key passes

2

0

Assists

1

0

Pass accuracy

99%

94%

Duels won

2/3

1/6

Interceptions

2

0

Dribbled past

0x

1x

As you can see in the table above, McGregor’s use of the ball and his actions defensively were nowhere up to the standards he set during the win over Hearts, as the Saints midfielders got the better of him far too easily in physical duels.

The difference in his performance correlating with the difference in results speaks to how integral he is to Celtic, because he is the heartbeat of the side and much of the team’s success depends on him playing to his level in the middle of the park.

Celtic midfielder Callum McGregor.

McGregor, who has started 28 of his 29 appearances in the Premiership this season, provides a metronomic presence at the base of the midfield, controlling games for the Hoops, but allowed his level to drop against St. Johnstone and it contributed to the loss.

There is a former Celtic player, however, who has gone on to develop into being an even better player than the Hoops skipper in a deep-lying midfield role, as Ryan Christie has thrived since moving on from Parkhead.

How much Celtic sold Ryan Christie for

The Hoops reportedly sold the Scotland international to Bournemouth for a reported fee of £1.5m in the summer of 2021, having spent six years at Parkhead.

Christie made 151 appearances for the Premiership giants during his time in Glasgow, scoring 42 goals and providing 44 assists, before his move down south to the Championship – at the time.

During his time with the Hoops, the left-footed whiz predominantly played as either an attacking midfielder or as a winger as part of the midfield set-up, as he looked to impact games with goals and assists.

Christie was capable of the spectacular, as shown in the clip below, and even racked up an eye-catching tally of 21 goals and 16 assists in 45 appearances in all competitions during the 2019/20 campaign.

At that point, it seems unlikely that anyone would have predicted that Christie would go on to become an upgrade on McGregor in the number six position, as he was thriving as an attacker before his move to Bournemouth for £1.5m.

However, that is what has happened as the former St. Johnstone star has gone on to become an exceptional deep-lying midfield player in the Premier League at the Vitality.

Why Christie is now an upgrade on McGregor

Since signing for the Cherries, the bulk of the 30-year-old star’s appearances for the club have come as a defensive midfielder or a central midfielder, which is a big change from purely playing as an attack-minded midfielder or winger for Celtic.

If you compare Christie’s performances against McGregor’s over the past 365 days, whilst both now play in similar positions in midfield – unlike their time together at Parkhead, then it appears as though the left-footed ace would be an upgrade on the Celtic captain.

As you can see in the chart above, the Bournemouth star offers significantly more out of possession whilst also providing his team with more from an offensive perspective, when it comes to creating chances and building play that leads to shots.

Similar conclusions can be drawn by comparing Christie’s form in the Premier League to that of McGregor’s in the Champions League in the 2024/25 campaign, as shown below.

These statistics, this season and over the past 365 days, suggest that the former Bhoys ace would currently be an upgrade on McGregor in midfield, by doing more to help out his defence whilst also providing more creativity with his passing from a deep-lying role.

The Scottish ace was hailed by former Cherries defender Joe Partington earlier this year, as the former Celtic man was lauded for his consistency in the middle of the park.

Partington said: “Ryan Christie’s consistency this season is incredible. His level is so so high – his ability to look exceptionally in control of what he’s doing. I hope its not underwhelming to say he’s outstandingly basic.”

Bournemouth midfielder Ryan Christie.

He added: “His touch is always perfect, his pass is always the right weight at the right time at the right angle – he plays the pass to the right player in the right moment into the right space.”

Christie, who has started 27 of his 29 appearances in the Premier League, has consistency to go along with his quality on the pitch, and consistency has been an issue – albeit over just two games – for McGregor since the international break.

However, there is no guarantee that he would have developed in the way that he has if Celtic had kept him at Parkhead, as the midfielder may have stuck to his role as an attacker, rather than being moved further back into a number six position.

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Therefore, the Hoops may not see Christie as one that got away from them from that perspective, but he was still a quality player who was sold for a relatively small amount of money, which should be frustrating for the Scottish giants.

Usman Khan banned by ECB for five years

The ban includes all ECB events, meaning he cannot play the ILT20 and the Abu Dhabi T10, until 2029

Danyal Rasool05-Apr-2024

Usman Khan’s Pakistan prospects improved after his superb performances in the 2024 PSL•PCB/PSL

Usman Khan, who recently reverted allegiance from UAE to Pakistan, has been banned by the Emirates Cricket Board (ECB) for five years. The ban includes all ECB events during this period, meaning he cannot play in the ILT20, the Abu Dhabi T10, or any other ECB-affiliated competitions held in the UAE until 2029.An ECB statement said the decision had been reached after Usman was “found to have breached his obligations to the Emirates Cricket Board”.The board accused Usman of misrepresenting his intentions to them. “Usman was found to have misrepresented to ECB about his decision to play for the UAE team and has used the opportunities and development provided by the ECB to him to seek out other prospects and it was evident that he was no longer wanting to play for ECB nor complete the eligibility criteria which he was under an obligation to do.”That disciplinary action would be taken against Usman was widely expected, though the severity of the punishment and the combative tone taken by the ECB showcases the strength of feeling at the board. Usman was well on the way to qualifying for the UAE, having seemingly given up hopes of playing for Pakistan. He competed in the Abu Dhabi T10 and the ILT20 as a local player for the UAE, and as recently as last month, played the Pakistan Super League as an overseas player.His performances in that tournament shifted the dial, though. He ended up as the second highest run-scorer despite playing just seven of 11 games for Multan Sultans, scoring two of the tournament’s four centuries. In an interview with ESPNcricinfo on the eve of the final, he appeared to express little interest in playing for Pakistan, but when he was called up for a training camp with the rest of the Pakistan squad, he accepted.Related

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UAE-bound Usman Khan included in Pakistan training camp ahead of NZ T20Is

Speaking to ESPNcricinfo after his call-up, Usman believed he had not breached any contract, contesting that his contract included an exit clause with a 30-day notice period. He was resigned to whatever sanction the ECB levied, and said the allure of playing for Pakistan when the PCB came calling after the PSL was too enticing to turn down.It is not yet clear whether the ban means the work permit Usman held will also be voided, but either way, events over the last few weeks effectively closed the door on prospects of Usman ever playing for UAE. His most immediate concern is Pakistan’s upcoming T20I series against New Zealand, for which he is expected to be named in the squad. The T20 World Cup, one of the primary reasons Usman wanted to play for Pakistan, takes place in June in the USA and the West Indies.

Shades of Sanchez: Arteta personally driving Arsenal move for £26m machine

Mikel Arteta will no doubt plead caution surrounding the signing of any new centre-forward this summer, with it not a guarantee that such a move will instantly propel Arsenal to long-awaited Premier League glory.

Indeed, it is not only through the middle where reinforcements are required, with an upgrade on the left flank also seemingly needed with Gabriel Martinelli and Leandro Trossard scoring just ten top-flight goals between them this term.

That said, fans and pundits alike are craving a statement acquisition of a new striker after what looks set to be another second-place finish in the league, with the Gunners having also come up short in the previous two campaigns.

Not since the summer of 2022 have the club forked out for a new number nine, albeit with even Gabriel Jesus not exactly an out-and-out centre-forward, particularly considering much of his work came on the right flank during his prior stint at Manchester City.

With the Brazilian having since been ravaged by injury – with Kai Havertz also currently sidelined – there is a real dearth of reliable options at the Emirates, a fact epitomised by Mikel Merino’s recent shift into a makeshaft target man.

Whether it is the difference between winning the league or not, the Gunners simply must sign a striker. If recent reports are anything to go by, the search has already started.

Latest on Arsenal's striker search

The leading target for the north London side remains that of Alexander Isak, although question marks remain over just how feasible a deal would be for the in-form Swede, considering Newcastle United’s £150m asking price.

Alexander Isak

With that in mind, the Gunners appear to be looking elsewhere in their extensive search, with Football Transfers naming Bologna’s Santiago Castro as a potential summer option.

As per the report, it is Arteta who is said to be ‘personally pushing’ to seal the signing of the young Argentine, with the Arsenal boss believed to be a ‘huge admirer’ of the promising forward.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

While the piece does mainly focus in on Arsenal’s parallel interest in Atletico Madrid starlet, Adrian Nino, the Spaniard appears more of a project signing, considering he only made his first-team debut for the LaLiga side in January.

Castro, meanwhile, may only be 20 himself, although amid a promising campaign in Serie A, he has seemingly caught the attention of Arteta as someone who could come in and make an instant impact at the Emirates.

Perhaps, he could well follow in the footsteps of a certain Alexis Sanchez in an Arsenal shirt…

Why Castro would be a good signing for Arsenal

While the Gunners did actually pluck Sanchez from Barcelona back in 2014, the Chilean did mirror his fellow South American by initially plying his trade in his homeland with Cobreloa, before then making his name in Italy at Udinese.

The now veteran forward – who has ended up back at the Italian outfit in the twilight of his career – notably scored 12 goals and provided a further ten assists in the 2010/11 Serie A season, before being poached by Barca, having typically operated as a centre-forward or second striker.

Castro, meanwhile, has followed a similar path after starting out in his native Argentina with Velez Sarsfield – for whom he scored nine goals in 64 games – prior to making the switch to Bologna last year, going on to score eight times and register four assists in Italy’s top flight in 2024/25.

Games (starts)

29 (25)

Goals

8

Assists

4

Goal frequency

266 mins

Big chances missed

6

Big chances created

3

Key passes*

0.9

Touches*

27.1

Now valued at around €30m (£26m), according to reports in January, Castro is well on course to emulating Sanchez’s final season at Udinese, with now perhaps the chance for Arsenal to pounce – rather than signing him later down the line, like they did with Sanchez.

Having been described as the “complete forward” by analyst Ben Mattinson, the 6 foot machine does mirror the ex-Arsenal man in also being able to feature on the flanks, ensuring he could also rival the likes of Martinelli and Trossard in that left-wing berth.

Bologna'sSantiagoCastrocelebrates after the match

Not just an “instinctive finisher”, in the words of Mattinson, the Buenos Aires native may also prove a valuable addition due to his innate link-up play, as shown by the fact that he ranks in the top 10% of strikers in Europe’s top five leagues for pass completion.

A composed presence both in possession and in front of goal, Castro could certainly be worth taking a punt on. With Arsenal having seen the success of signing Sanchez, amid his return of 124 goals and assists in just 166 games for the club, the capture of a potential successor will hopefully prove just as fruitful.

With 20 goals and assists in 46 games for Bologna since signing back in January 2024, the 20-year-old could well be a wildcard solution.

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2021 Fantasy Baseball: Milwaukee Brewers Team Outlook – One Good Arm Away From Playoff Contention

2021 Milwaukee Brewers

The Brewers have made the postseasons in each of the past three seasons, but they didn’t belong in 2020 after going 29-31. Milwaukee’s only trip to the World Series came in 1982. They have no championships in the team's 52-year history.

Milwaukee finished 11th in ERA (4.16) but 25th in runs (247) and 16th in home runs (75).

The top signing in free agency was 2B Kolten Wong. The Brewers added IF Daniel Robertson and C Luke Maile to compete for bench roles.

They lost 3B Jeff Gyorko, OF Ryan Braun, and SP Brett Anderson.

Their bullpen looks electric in the eighth and ninth inning with RP Josh Hader and RP Devin Williams.

The Brewers have two emerging arms at the front of their starting rotation with SP Brandon Woodruff and SP Corbin Burnes. Milwaukee needs to rebuild the back of their starting staff if they want to return to the postseason.

Milwaukee should have two top-tier bats in the middle of their lineup with OF Christian Yelich and 2B Keston Hiura. The infield's structure seems off, with the Brewers intending on starting four middle infielders – Hiura moving to first base and Luis Urias to third base.

I don’t see an impactful team, but the Brewers should close out wins late in games. Their front two starters set the stage to be over .500, but Milwaukee may give too many games from their third to fifth starters. A great season by Yelich and Hiura is almost a must to compete in the NL Central.

Charles LeClaire/USA TODAY Sports
Starting Lineup

1. 2B Kolten Wong

After a productive 2019 season (.285 with 61 runs, 11 home runs, 59 RBI, and 24 steals over 478 at-bats), Wong never found his power stride last year. His average hit rate (1.229) slipped into a much weaker area while also seeing a slide in his contact batting average (.318).

His walk rate (9.6) was the second-best output of his eight-year career. Wong has had a low strikeout rate (14.4) in six straight seasons.

He was on pace for 489 at-bats with 70 runs, three home runs, 43 RBI, and 14 steals.

In 2019, his best value came in April (.272 with four home runs, 15 RBI, and five steals over 92 at-bats). After the All-Star break, he hit .342 with 27 runs, four home runs, 24 RBI, and 10 steals over 199 at-bats while failing to get every day playing time in any month.

Wong’s hard-hit rate came in at 27.9 last year and 25.1 in 2019, supporting no upside in power. His HR/FB rate (2.3) was a career-low in 2020 while coming in at 7.4 for his career. He continues to have a weak fly-ball rate (28.9 – 32.8 in his career).

2021 Fantasy Outlook: The Brewers signed Wong to a two-year $18 deal in early February. Only once in his eight years in the majors has he had over 500 at-bats (2015 – 557). Wong has double-digit power, but his swing path and the limited number of balls hit hard lower his ceiling in home runs. With a leadoff job and 550 at-bats, I could see 80 runs, a dozen home runs, 60 RBI, and 20-plus steals. His batting average should have a neutral floor. Wong looks to be value based on his early ADP (415).

2. OF Lorenzo Cain

After playing five games (6-for-18 with two RBI) in 2020, Cain decided to opt-out of the season due to concern with Covid.

He ended being a bust in 2019 after losing value in runs (60), batting average (.260), and steals (18). His contact batting average (.320) had a sharp decline with no pulse in his RBI rate (12) and average hit rate (1.432) over the previous three seasons.

Cain looked on track over the first half of the year (48 runs, five home runs, 30 RBI, and 10 steals) in the counting categories, but his batting average (.246) had risk.

He battled oblique, knee, and ankle injuries over the final two months, leading to shorter stats (.281 with 27 runs, six home runs, 18 RBI, and eight stolen bases over 221 at-bats) after the All-Star break.

His walk rate (8.0) and strikeout rate (17.0) fell in line with his career path. His hard-hit rate (42.1) finished higher (111th) than expected when considering his low total in home runs (11).

Over the last two full seasons, his ground ball rate (54.6 in 2018 and 50.2 in 2019) hindered his power, while his HR/FB rate has been in a tight range (9.5, 9.4, 9.7, and 9.9) from 2016 to 2019.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: At age 34, Cain has a fading skill set in steals. He’ll hit the ball hard, but rarely high enough to clear the fences. His ADP (245) is 63 spots lower than 2019 (182). He is trending toward a 15/20 player with a hole in the RBI category if he doesn’t add more loft to his swing. I expect a bounce back to neutral in batting average and runs.

3. OF Christian Yelich

Yelich repeated his growth and path in his average hit rate (2.098), but he whiffed like a champ (30.8 percent – 21.2 in his career). His contact batting average (.331) was also well below 2018 (.426) and 2019 (.434).

After improving his swing path in 2019 (ground ball rate – 43.2 and fly-ball rate – 35.9), Yelich saw his groundball rate (50.8) spike while finishing better than his career average (55.5).

He has a tough time with runners on base (.130 with 37 strikeouts over 77 at-bats). His RBI rate (9) was one the lowest in the majors. Yelich lost his swing against right-handed pitching (.169 with seven home runs and 14 RBI over 142 at-bats).

His hard-hit rate (55.6) was the eighth highest in baseball. He posted an electric HR/FB rate over the last three seasons (35.0, 32.8, and 32.4).

Yelich hit .308 over 1,263 at-bats with 257 runs, 92 home runs, 229 RBI, and 56 stolen bases over three seasons with the Brewers. His walk rate (18.6) is elite.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: The combination of bad timing at the plate and pressing led to his failure in batting average and production in RBIs. Fantasy owners need to throw out last year and focus on his high ceiling in batting average and power. His ADP (12) remains high while owning the skill set to be a five-category stud. Yelich has a floor of .320 with 100 runs, 35 home runs, 100 RBI, and 20 steals, making him an impact piece to a winning fantasy team.

4. 1B Keston Hiura

Just like Christian Yelich, Hiura struggled with runners on base (RBI rate – 13) while having more regression in his strikeout rate (34.6 – 30.8 in 2019 in the majors). He also took fewer walks (6.5 – 7.2 in 2019).

His contact batting average (.348) came in well below 2019 with Milwaukee (.459) and in the minors (.470). Hiura finished with improvement in his average hit rate (1.935).

In 2019, between AAA and the majors, he hit .313 with 95 runs, 38 home runs, 85 RBI, and 16 stolen bases over 527 at-bats.

Over three seasons in the minors, Hiura hit .317 with 150 runs, 36 home runs, 122 RBI, and 24 stolen bases over 865 at-bats while owning a much more attractive strikeout rate (21.1).

His scouting report suggested a high average bat. His power came much quicker and more plentiful than expected.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: The move to first base should take the pressure off of Hiura’s right elbow and lower the risk of needing TJ surgery down the road. The high number of strikeouts is a concern until he improves his play discipline in the majors. Hiura also has a lot to prove with runners on base. Hitting behind Christian Yelich will create plenty of RBI chances, and he should hit a minimum of 30 home runs. With an ADP of 68 in the 12-team high-stakes market, his batting average must move over the .270 mark while adding some steals. A bet on Hiura is based on his high ceiling.

5. OF Avisail Garcia

There was a whole lot of emptiness in Garcia’s swing and production in 2020. His contact batting average (.326) came in well below 2019 (.379) while seeing a shape decline in his average hit rate (1.372).

His strikeout rate (23.7) fell in line with his career average (23.4). Garcia finished with the highest walk rate (9.7) of his career.

He struggled against right-handed pitching (.214 with one home run and six RBI over 126 at-bats). Garcia failed to hit a home run over his final 108 at-bats.

Garcia finished with a massive decline in his HR/FB rate (5.6 – 17.2 in 2019 and 15.6 in his career). He continues to have a low fly-ball rate (27.3).

From 2017 to 2019, Garcia hit .288 with 183 runs, 57 home runs, 201 RBI, and 18 steals over 1,363 at-bats.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: His ADP (317) is reasonable if he plays at the level set in his top years in home runs. Garcia can’t offer explosive power without a chance in his swing path, and more balls hit hard. Viable .280/20/80 player while chipping in with some steals.

6. 3B Luis Urias

Urias turned into a beast at AAA in 2019 (.315 with 62 runs, 19 home runs, 50 RBI, and seven steals over 295 at-bats), but he’s failed to have any success in the majors over parts of three seasons (.226 with 43 runs, six home runs, and 40 RBI over 372 at-bats).

His approach (strikeout rate – 23.5 and walk rate – 9.0) was close to the league average in the majors, but Urias couldn’t match his contact batting average (.307) in the minors (.359) with fade as well in his average hit rate (1.417).

Over six seasons in the minors, he hit .308 with 36 home runs, 219 RBI, and 42 stolen bases over 2,051 at-bats.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Urias isn’t a lock to earn a starting job, but his bat does have upside with a clear opportunity to win playing time in at third base. For now, a .280 hitter with a chance at a 60/15/60/10 skill set with 500 at-bats. Backend player to watch with upside based on his waiver wire ADP (515).

7. C Omar Narvaez

In 2019, Narvaez set career-highs in at-bats (428), runs (63), home runs (22), and RBI (55) while showing growth in his average hit rate (1.655).

Last year, his strikeout rate (31.0) came in well above his career average (17.8), leading to an empty season (.176 with two home runs and 10 RBI over 108 at-bats). His contact batting average (.275) had a shape decline from 2018 (.358) and 2019 (.354).

Narvaez ranked 415th in hard-hit rate (27.5) in 2019 and 336th (21.7) in 2020. His HR/FB rate (8.0) came in more than 50 percent below his breakthrough season in power in 2019 (16.1). His fly-ball rate (36.2) was a step above his career average (34.0).

Over the past three seasons, he hit .263 with 101 runs, 33 home runs, and 95 RBI over 816 at-bats.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Narvaez fits the C2 mold with a low ADP (453). The combination of his ground balls swing, low hard-hit rate, and rising strikeout rate will keep many fantasy managers away. Viable cheat at catcher with a chance at 50/12/50 season with a rebound to neutral in batting average.

8. SS Orlando Arcia

Arcia turned in another dull season in 2020, but there were some small signs of growth. His average hit rate (1.600) was a four year high while posting a rebound in his contact batting average (.319). He finished with his best approach (strikeout rate – 16.9 and walk rate – 7.4).

His 2020 stats projected over 500 at-bats would come to 64 runs, 14 home runs, and 59 RBI.

He continues to have a low fly-ball rate (31.2) despite being a career-high. His HR/FB rate (11.4) came in above his career average (10.8) for the second straight year.

From 2017 to 2020, Arcia hit .248 with 161 runs, 38 home runs, 162 RBI, and 31 stolen bases over 1,521 at-bats.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Despite just reaching the prime of his career, Arcia remains an afterthought on draft day. He’s still young enough to improve, but the Brewers will continue to bat him at the bottom of the lineup. More of a short-term injury replacement if his bat is heating up in season.

Bench Options

OF Derek Fisher

Over six seasons in the minors, Fisher hit .279 with 90 home runs, 317 RBI, and 111 steals in 1,934 at-bats. He played well at AAA (.289 with 50 home runs, 153 RBI, and 40 stolen bases over 913 at-bats). Even with competitive stats, his strikeout rate (23.9) was a liability in the minors.

Fisher had chances in the majors in each of the past four years, but he only hit .194 over 402 at-bats with 17 home runs, 52 RBI, and 10 steals. He will take walks (10.3 percent), but his strikeout rate (35.8) is a disaster in the majors.

His HR/FB rate is 24.6 in the majors. Fisher missed most of last season with a quad and knee issue.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: A risk/reward player who will be found in the free-agent pool until he figures out how to make better contact. Fisher was released by Toronto and picked up by Milwaukee in late February.

1B Dan Vogelbach

Last year Vogelbach bounced around three different franchises with no impact (.209 with six home runs and 16 RBI over 115 at-bats).

Seattle gave him the first starting opportunity of his career in 2019. He finished with strength in power (30 home runs) and his walk rate (16.5), but his batting average (.208) remains a glaring hole.

Vogelbach had huge problems vs. left-handed pitching (.154 with five home runs and 19 RBI over 136 at-bats).

Over eight seasons in the minors, he hit .287 with 120 home runs, 498 RBI, and 15 stolen bases over 2,714 at-bats.

His HR/FB rate has been healthy in 2019 (21.3) and 2020 (22.2).

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Vogelbach needs the DH in the National League to receive the bulk of the at-bats against right-handed pitching. He needs to lower his strikeout rate (26.6) and improve his contact batting average to earn over 400 at-bats. I don’t consider him a middle of the order hitter based on his low RBI rate (13) in his career.

OF Billy McKinney

Over his seven years in the minors, McKinney has shown growth in some areas of his game, along with struggles in other parts. In his career, 2,356 at-bats on the farm, he hit .270 with 314 runs, 61 home runs, 330 RBI, and 22 stolen bases.

McKinney hit .300 in 2015 between High A and AA while adding more power to his resume in 2017 (16 home runs over 441 at-bats) and 2018 (22 home runs over 421 at-bats).

His walk rate (10.4) in the minors gives him a chance at hitting near the top of the order while not being a high risk in strikeouts (18.0 percent).

In limited time in the majors over three seasons, his approach regressed (strikeout rate – 25.8 and walk rate – 7.3), with strength in his average hit rate (1.895). He hit .231 over 373 at-bats with 52 runs, 18 home runs, and 41 RBI.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: McKinney is a former first-round draft pick (2013). This season he’ll compete for a bench outfield for the Brewers. Toronto only gave his three at-bats (two hits) in 2020.

Manny Pina (C): Pina remains the backup catcher for the Brewers. Over the past four seasons, he hit .257 with 27 home runs and 101 RBI over 833 at-bats. In 2020, Pina only had nine hits over 39 at-bats with two home runs and five RBI.

Daniel Robertson (3B): Robertson handled himself well over 282 at-bats in the majors in 2018 (.262 with 46 runs, nine home runs, 34 RBI, and two steals) while owning a top of an order walk rate (12.1).

His bat was exposed in 2019 (.213 with two home runs and 19 RBI over 207 at-bats) with Tampa due to a high strikeout rate (24.9).

Last year he went 7-for-21 with no home runs and two RBI for the Giants.

Over eight seasons in the minors, Robertson hit .280 with 42 home runs, 235 RBI, and 14 stolen bases over 2,054 at-bats.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: His approach and upside in power should earn him a utility role for the Brewers in 2021 with more upside if he makes better contact.

Tim Lopes (OF): Lopes has two seasons of experience at AAA (.290 with 12 home runs, 89 RBI, and 44 steals over 728 at-bats).

Seattle gave him a bench role in 2019 and 2020, which led to him hitting .252 with three home runs, 27 RBI, and 11 stolen bases over 254 at-bats.

Over his eight years in the minors, he hit .277 with 27 home runs, 350 RBI, and 159 stolen bases over 3,167 at-bats. Lopes has a league average walk rate (8.1) with a favorable strikeout rate (15.7).

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Lopes offers possible sneaky speed off the bench for Milwaukee if he makes the team out of spring training.

Kirby Lee/USA TODAY Sports
Starting Pitching

1. SP Brandon Woodruff

Over the past two seasons, Woodruff emerged as a frontline ace. He went 14-8 over 35 starts with a 3.41 ERA and 234 strikeouts over 195.1 innings. His walk rate (2.2) has been top-tier over this span, with a further push in his strikeout rate (11.1) last year.

His ERA (3.05) and WHIP (0.991) move to elite areas in 2020. He allowed two runs or fewer in seven of his 11 starts while pitching the best in September (2.25 ERA ad 43 strikeouts over 32 innings).

Woodruff brings an elite fastball (96.9) that was tough to hit (four-seam – .213 BAA and sinker – .225 BAA) over the past two seasons. His slider (.212 BAA) grades well, while his changeup (.207 BAA) improved in 2020.

Over five seasons in the minors, he had a 3.40 ERA and 420 strikeouts over 463 innings.

The addition of his sinker has been the key to his development in the majors. His groundball rate (49.4) is rising, but so was his HR/FB rate (14.1). Woodruff induced a much higher number of infield flies (17.2 percent – 5.0 in 2019) last season.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: His ADP (36) placed him as the 14th starter drafted in 2021. Woodruff offers command, a big fastball, and success with his secondary pitches. His next step is proving his worth over a full season of starts. He is trending toward a sub 3.00 ERA with 225-plus strikeouts.

2. SP Corbin Burnes

Over his first four games last year, Burnes made one start with three relief appearances, leading to a 3.38 ERA and 24 strikeouts over 16 innings. He looked to have some downside risk based on his 11 walks.

Milwaukee moved into the rotation on August 18th. Burnes went 4-1 over his final eight starts with a 1.65 ERA, .181 BAA, and 64 strikeouts over 43.2 innings. He lowered his walk rate to 2.7 over this span.

Burnes dominated right-handed batters (.140 with one home run and 40 strikeouts over 93 at-bats). His arm also played well vs. lefties (.200 BAA).

His AFB (96.0) was career-high. In 2020, Burnes added a cutter (.169 BAA) that ended up being a plus pitch and edge against left-handed batters. His slider (.071 BAA), changeup (.182 BAA), and curveball (.095) were tough to hit.

Burnes still walks too many batters (3.6 per nine innings), but his deep arsenal of pitches pushed his strikeout rate (13.3) to an electric level. Best of all was the cleanup of damage in home runs allowed (two over 59.2 innings compared to 17 over 49 innings in 2019).

Over four seasons in the minors, he went 14-8 with a 3.22 ERA and 287 strikeouts over 282.1 innings.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Burnes has a short sample size, so investing in him will come with a price (ADP – 58). The most innings pitched by him came in 2017 (145.2) in the minors. If he repeats his last season's command, Burnes looks well on his way to an impactful season in ERA with 200-plus strikeouts. Go big or go home pick.

3. SP Josh Lindblom

The Dodgers drafted Lindblom in the second round in 2008. After struggling over seven seasons in the minors (22-19 with 4.27 ERA and 429 strikeouts over 497.1), he pitched well in relief over two seasons (3.31 ERA and 98 strikeouts over 100.2 innings) in the majors.

His arm lost value in 2013 (5.46 ERA), which led to a trip to Korea to reinvent his career. Lindblom made a big step forward in 2018 and 2019 (35-7 with a 2.68 ERA and 346 strikeouts over 363.1 innings).

Over five seasons in Korea, he went 63-34 with a 3.55 ERA and 750 strikeouts over 823.1 innings.

With the Brewers in 2020, Lindblom struggled to find his way over his first seven starts (6.46 ERA, .267 BAA, 1.533 WHIP, six home runs, and 40 strikeouts over 30.2 innings). After two innings in the bullpen (no runs allowed), he pitched well in two starts (one run over 10.1 innings with no walks and eight strikeouts). His season ended with a subpar showing (three runs and five baserunners over 2.1 innings).

His strikeout rate (10.3) came in strong with regression in his command (3.2 walks per nine) and some struggles with home runs (1.2 per nine). Lindblom had a playable WHIP (1.279), which suggested his ERA should have been closer to 3.90 than 5.16.

He continues to have a short fastball (90.5 MPH) while having the most success with his split-finger fastball (.222 BAA), curveball (.143 BAA), and slider (.148 BAA).

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Fantasy owners gave Lindblom a backend ADP (318) in 12-team leagues, which is a bet on his strikeout rate and command. There are enough signs in his profile to take a shot on him as a bench/rotational starter. His Korean command (2.3 walks per nine) points to a 3.75 ERA with some help in strikeouts.

4. SP Adrian Houser

Houser drifted his way through the minors for nine seasons (25-35 with a 4.21 ERA and 513 strikeouts over 572.2 innings) with no shining seasons on his resume.

In 2019 after four good starts at AAA (2-0 with 1.27 ERA and 23 strikeouts over 21.1 innings), the Brewers called him up. Houser had an up and down season in Milwaukee while working as a starter and reliever. He finished with a 3.72 ERA and 117 strikeouts over 111.1 innings.

Last year Houser looked sharp over his first two games (one run over 12 innings with nine strikeouts) before failing into the abyss (6.70 ERA, .308 BAA, and 1.674 WHIP over 43 innings) over his final nine starts.

He continues to struggle against left-handed batters (.336 with seven home runs over 125 at-bats) with a good fastball (94.2 MPH).

Houser didn’t have one secondary pitch of value (curveball – .270 BAA, slider – .339 BAA, and changeup – .321 BAA) over the past two seasons. Any success is driven by his sinker (.238 BAA) and four-seam fastball (.237 BAA).

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Fantasy owners priced him better than expected in the early draft season in 2020 (ADP – 263), but they jumped off his bus this year (ADP – 489). I’d rather go cliff diving into an empty pool than chase bad innings from a strikeout pitcher that can’t find his way vs. lefties or develop any secondary pitch of value. On the positive side, Milwaukee may have to wheel him out every fifth day.

5. SP Eric Lauer

Last year Lauer suffered a left shoulder injury in March. With four months to recover, he looked ready for the late start of the season in July. A battle with Covid led to a couple of days on the injured list.

After a sharp outing in relief (no runs over 2.2 innings with six strikeouts), Lauer didn’t receive his first start until August 7th. His arm didn’t look right after getting blasted in back-to-back games (13 runs, 19 baserunners, and two home runs over 6.2 innings), crushing fantasy owners (me included) that bought into his one game with success.

The Brewers shipped him out the next day. Lauer struggled in relief in his other appearances of the year (three runs and five baserunners over 1.2 innings).

Lauer didn't progress over his first two seasons in the majors (14-17 with a 4.40 ERA and 238 strikeouts over 261.2 innings).

His walk rate (3.5) remains a problem while posting a mid-tier strikeout rate (8.3). His AFB (91.9) is below the league average, with only one pitch of value in his major league career (slider – .217 BAA).

Over three seasons on the minors, Lauer had a 2.93 ERA and 195 strikeouts over 178 innings with better command (strikeout rate – 9.9 and walk rate – 2.8).

2021 Fantasy Outlook: This season, he’ll compete for the fifth starting job. There were no late season reports about a shoulder issue. Lauer has underperformed his minor league career, which gives him a chance to be much improved with better command. No one has drafted him in 12-team leagues, making him only a name to follow early in the year.

SP Freddy Peralta

Over seven seasons in the minors, Peralta went 19-27 with a 3.25 ERA and 540 strikeouts over 440.1 innings.

His arm started to take a step forward in 2017 at AA (2.26 ERA over 63.2 innings with 91 strikeouts). After 13 excellent starts at AAA (6-2 with a 3.14 ERA and 92 strikeouts over 63 innings), he earned his first chance in the majors in 2018.

He pitched well with Milwaukee except for three games (19 runs and 27 baserunners over 13.1 innings). Peralta allowed two runs or less in six of his 14 starts while delivering three electric starts (no runs over 19.2 innings with 30 strikeouts).

In 2019, his arm regressed with the Brewers (7-3 with a 5.29 ERA and 115 strikeouts over 85 innings), leading to Milwaukee working almost exclusively out of the bullpen last year. Over his 15 appearances, Peralta allowed seven runs and 10 baserunners in his first and last games of the season. In between, he had a 2.22 ERA and 41 strikeouts over 24.1 innings.

He set a career-high in his strikeout (14.4) while struggling with walks (3.7 per nine).

His AFB (93.4) is about the league average. In 2020, he added a slider (.188 BAA), which ended up being a plus pitch while dumping his changeup. Peralta still offers an excellent curveball (.222 BAA), but its usage dropped by almost 50 percent last year.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Peralta still isn’t there as far as command, but he does create swings and misses, which is more than I can say from Adrian Houser and Eric Lauer. His lack of a changeup type pitch will hurt him through the third time in the batting order. His ADP (387) is favorable as a buy and hold in deep leagues. Peralta brings WHIP risk, but all other signs point to explosive upside with the development of better command.

SP Drew Rasmussen

Rasmussen went 14-5 with a 2.65 ERA and 150 strikeouts over 170 innings over three college seasons. Unfortunately, he needed two TJ surgeries, with the second costing him all of 2018.

Rasmussen pushed quickly through three levels in his first year in the minors (3.15 ERA and 96 strikeouts over 74.1 innings). His strikeout rate (11.6) creates an edge, but he walked too many batters (3.8 per nine).

With no minor league games in 2020, Milwaukee gave him 12 appearances out of the bullpen. He battled home runs (1.8 per nine) while walking too many batters (nine over 15.1 innings). His strikeout rate (12.3) held form.

His AFB (98.1) is electric while working off of a slider (.308 BAA), curveball (.200 BAA), and changeup (no hits over 12 pitches thrown) combination.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Rasmussen enters 2021 at age 25, so he looks ready to push for a starting job. I’m not sure how many innings his arm can handle, which may lead to a split role. His fastball is major league ready, and he did look sharp over eight straight games out of the bullpen (one run over 10.1 innings with 13 strikeouts) last summer. Possible fast mover in spring training while possibly flying under the radar in many formats. It’s all about command early in his career.

CL Josh Hader

Hader led the National League in saves (13) while ranking sixth in SIscore (0.41) for reliever pitchers.

Over his first nine games, he didn’t allow a run or hit over 9.1 innings with 13 strikeouts while converting all seven saves. Hader gave away his perceived draft edge over his next eight appearances (eight runs, 14 baserunners, and three home runs over 6.1 innings). His season ended with 3.1 shutout innings with no walks and five strikeouts.

His walk rate (4.7) was the highest of his short career. For the second straight season, home runs allowed (three over 19 innings) were a problem (15 over 75.2 innings in 2019). Hader continues to have an elite strikeout rate (14.7).

His AFB (95.0) was one MPH shorter than 2019 (96.0). Hader threw his four-seamer (.171 BAA) about two-thirds of the time compared to 84 percent in 2019. His slider (.037) remains an electric pitch. Batters only had one hit over his 125 sliders in 2020.

Hader pitches up in the strike zone (fly-ball rate – 58.8 and 52.2 in his career) with a high HR/FB rate (15.0).

2021 Fantasy Outlook: With Devin Williams emerging as an elite right-handed arm in the Brewers' bullpen, Hader may not have as clean of a ride in saves. Over four seasons in the Brewers, he went 12-11 with a 2.54 ERA, 380 strikeouts, and 62 saves over 223.2 innings. Hader is a top-two closer drafted in 2021 in many leagues with an ADP of 56. As much as I love his arm and impact upside, I'm troubled with long ball and command struggles. He should offer an edge in ERA, WHIP, and strikeouts while receiving a minimum of 30 saves.

RP Devin Williams

Williams started his career as a starter in the Brewers’ system after getting drafted in the second round in 2013. After missing 2017 with a right elbow injury that required TJ surgery, he struggled in 2018 as a starter over 14 games at High A (0-3 with 5.82 ERA and 35 strikeouts over 34 innings).

Milwaukee shifted him to the bullpen in 2019 with success at AA (7-2 with a 2.36 ERA and 76 strikeouts over 53.1 innings with four saves).

Last year his arm exploded on the major league scene after allowing one run and eight hits over 27 innings with 53 strikeouts. Williams had an impressive strikeout rate (17.7) while walking three batters per nine innings. Eight of his nine walks came against left-handed batters over 62 at-bats.

His AFB (96.7) was top shelf while offering an almost unhittable changeup (two singles over 227 pitches). Batters only hit .222 vs. his four-seam fastball.

Over six seasons in the minors, Williams had a 3.73 ERA and 405 strikeouts over 378.1 innings.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Williams has a short resume of success, but his arm looks closer ready. He’ll keep the ball on the ground (61.1 percent in 2020 and 66.7 percent in 2019 at AAA). His ADP (140) is in a challenging range as Williams needs to get some saves to be worth his investment.

RP Clayton Andrews

After an electric season in college (1.99 ERA and 118 strikeouts over 99.2 innings), the Brewers drafted Andrews in the 17th round of the MLB June Amateur Draft.

Over his first two seasons in the minors, he went 11-3 with a 2.83 ERA, 131 strikeouts, and 11 saves over 92.1 innings. His strikeout rate (12.8) creates an edge with some work to do in his walk rate (3.1).

His fastball sits in the low-90s while offering an upside curveball, league-average slider, and changeup that needs work.

2021 Fantasy Outlook: Andrews pitched 31.1 innings in 2019 at AA, leading to a 2.59 ERA and 33 strikeouts over 31.1 innings. He should have pitched at AAA last season. If the Brewers need another lefty arm out of the bullpen, he could be a viable option. At 5’6” and 160 lbs., his ceiling doesn’t project to be a major league closer.

£110k-a-week Arsenal player's agents jet out for meeting over summer move

The agents of a “sensational” Arsenal player have now jetted out to hold a meeting over a potential move away from the Emirates Stadium, according to a report.

Andrea Berta planning summer midfield rebuild

Andrea Berta is poised to become the Gunners’ new sporting director, and while fans may be crying out for the Italian to sign a new striker as the first port of call, there have been suggestions he is also keen on overhauling the midfield.

Real Sociedad’s Martin Zubimendi remains Berta’s top target in midfield, although it is not yet a done deal, with the Spaniard potentially in line to take Thomas Partey’s spot in the starting XI, as the Ghanaian is out of contract at the end of the season.

Mikel Arteta is also believed to be a big fan of a different La Liga midfielder, however, with a report revealing the north Londoners are now very keen on signing Barcelona’s Marc Casado, although the Spaniard is protected by a huge £83m release clause.

Arsenal ahead of Liverpool in race to sign £71m striker who Wenger loves

The Gunners have leapfrogged their Premier League rivals in the race for an “unbelievable” forward.

By
Dominic Lund

Mar 17, 2025

There may be a need to bring in more than one new central midfielder this summer, given that there is also major doubt over Jorginho’s future, and reports from Brazil have revealed the Italian’s agents have now jetted out to discuss a move to Flamengo (via Sport Witness).

There is reportedly already a verbal agreement in place for the midfielder to join the Brazilian club on a three-year deal, and his reps have now held a meeting with Flamengo sporting director Jose Boto.

Arsenal'sJorginhoapplauds fans after the matc

The 33-year-old’s contract is set to expire at the end of the campaign, meaning he will be able to join Flamengo on a free transfer.

"Sensational" Jorginho playing sporadic role this season

The central midfielder has been impressive for the Gunners in the past, being lauded as “sensational” by BBC journalist Dan George, but he has started to play a lesser role in Arteta’s side this season, although he has played his part from the sidelines.

The Brazil-born midfielder has featured 12 times in the Premier League, with many of those appearances coming from the bench, and at 33-years-old he is arguably in the twilight years of his career, so it is probably wise to sanction his departure.

A return to the country of his birth could be a fitting end to Jorginho’s career, and Arsenal are now tasked with bringing in a suitable replacement for the £110k-per-week maestro, having identified a number of potential targets.

Player

Current club

Potential price

Martin Zubimendi

Real Sociedad

£51m

Morten Hjulmand

Sporting CP

£34m

Bruno Guimaraes

Newcastle United

£60m

Frenkie de Jong

Barcelona

£62m

He'll get Salah firing: Slot must hand "special" Liverpool star rare start

da bwin: When Liverpool beat West Ham United, responding after losing against Fulham one week earlier, it felt like a corner had been turned. Perhaps that defeat at Craven Cottage was the final twist in the overtures of a certain Premier League triumph.

da bet7: The ribbons will turn red this season. Later this afternoon, Liverpool have the chance to win the top-flight title against Leicester City at the King Power Stadium, should they return to winning ways on the road and second-placed Arsenal fall at Ipswich Town earlier in the day.

Though Mikel Arteta’s attention is almost solely focused on the continental stage, this feels improbable, if not out of the question. In any case, it’s a matter of when, not if, Arne Slot will join an exclusive list of managers to lift the Premier League trophy on their first attempt.

Managers Who Won Premier League in 1st Season

Season

Manager

Club

2004/05

Jose Mourinho

Chelsea

2009/10

Carlo Ancelotti

Chelsea

2013/14

Manuel Pellegrini

Man City

2016/17

Antonio Conte

Chelsea

Sourced via GIVEMESPORT

Leicester might be doomed but they still have quality in attack and will look to capitalise on any Liverpool complacency.

Liverpool team news

Trent Alexander-Arnold is back in first-team training after his ankle injury suffered against Paris Saint-Germain at Anfield last month.

However, Conor Bradley looks set to reprise his role at right-back, with the under-fire Andy Robertson pushing for a recall after his cameo last week, skewing into his own net off the bench following a mix-up with the skipper.

Joe Gomez remains absent due to an ankle injury, but Darwin Nunez could feature after missing out on Merseyside one week ago.

Darwin Nunez for Liverpool

Nunez might be destined for departure this summer, but his return does boost a Liverpool frontline looking to return to its best.

That’s not to say the Reds have been poor in attack lately, but Mohamed Salah hasn’t scored in five games, Diogo Jota and Nunez are out of sorts and Cody Gakpo hasn’t got going again since recovering from injury.

How Slot can respark Liverpool's frontline

Liverpool looked somewhat back to normal last weekend as they secured victory over West Ham, all but sealing the already overwhelming odds in the title race following Arsenal’s draw at Brentford.

Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah

Salah, after renewing his contract, produced a stunning trivela assist for Luis Diaz, the one man in Slot’s attack who is very much on form right now.

However, the Egyptian, 32, will be desperate to return his name to the scoresheet as he looks to build on his haul of 32 goals across all competitions

For whatever reason, it’s not quite clicking for Salah in front of goal. But it will again. With Trent not fit enough to start from the outset, Slot might be inclined to unleash Harvey Elliott in midfield, perhaps replacing Dominik Szoboszlai.

Liverpool enjoy the Hungarian’s tireless running but a more fixed creative point could be the perfect solvent of unfluent play in and around the final third.

Liverpool player Harvey Elliott

Having featured prominently under Jurgen Klopp last year during Liverpool’s injury-hit spell, Elliott has played a reduced part since the spinning of the managerial wheel, yet to even start in the Premier League this year. Still he’s got six goal involvements across the different competitions.

And it’s not as if he hasn’t demonstrated his capacities when given a shot. As per FBref, Elliott ranks among the top 1% of midfielders across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year for all of goals, assists and shot-creating actions, the top 3% for progressive passes and the top 5% for progressive carries per 90.

This perfectly illustrates his ball-playing game and skill in driving into dangerous positions, but most importantly, it underlines his ability to maximise his output when reaching such junctures, something Salah will be eyeing hungrily.

Harvey Elliott in the Premier League (LFC)

Season

Apps (starts)

Goals

Assists

24/25

12 (0)

0

1

23/24

34 (11)

3

6

22/23

32 (18)

1

2

21/22

6 (4)

0

0

20/21*

0 (0)

0

0

19/20

2 (0)

0

0

*Spent season on loan at Blackburn

Stats via Transfermarkt

As you can see, Elliott’s playing a bit part for the first time since his debut campaign, having only featured six times in 2021/22 but starting on four of those occasions before suffering a season-ending injury at Elland Road.

Elliott, described as a “special talent” by Sky Sports’ Neil Mellor, hasn’t played all that much this season, but he has showcased his vast playmaking skills on numerous occasions. For example, Liverpool might have been abject in their Carabao Cup final defeat against Newcastle United, but subs combined to score a late consolation, the young midfielder expertly playing Federico Chiesa through.

Ultimately, claiming that Liverpool are out of sorts simply isn’t true, having won five of their past six Premier League matches, but fans have been frustrated by the lack of spark in the centre at times this term and Elliott surely deserves a starting berth having been limited to full appearances in the cup competitions.

He’s come up trumps on several occasions, notably scoring the winner in the first leg against PSG, but now the £40k-per-week talent needs a chance to show he can pull strings in the Premier League and bring Salah back into goalscoring form.

Salah doesn’t dribble as much as he used to but he’s hardly averse to an electric burst, and with Elliott’s crisp timing, it could be the perfect tonic for his recent struggles to break the net.

Harvey Elliott celebrates for Liverpool

Elliott has acknowledged Salah for “teaching him” over the past several years at Liverpool, and now he has the chance to repay his tutor on what could be a momentous day for the Merseysiders.

Leicester won’t want to repeat some of their dismal displays of late, but if Elliott gets into a creative flow and connects with Salah, the Foxes simply won’t have a say in the matter.

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