NL Projected Pitching Staffs
This is the last of the four projected rosters columns. I hoped to have it up Saturday, but draft guide updates were forced to take priority. I'll have two notes columns up before next weekend. AL notes will be posted late Thursday night, with NL notes following the next night. I'll then finish off the prospects columns with the NL West sometime later next week.
As with the AL projected pitching staffs, I'm leaving out most of the injured pitchers, though I'll be sure to note them in the comments.
National League Pitching Staffs
Arizona
Brandon Webb
Dan Haren
Doug Davis
Micah Owings
Edgar Gonzalez
Next five:
Yusmeiro Petit,
Dustin Nippert,
Max Scherzer,
Juan Gutierrez,
Billy Buckner
Randy Johnson figures to begin the season on the disabled list as he continues his recovery from back surgery. Gonzalez would be the favorite to make a start in his place during the first week. Johnson could then be ready to go when a fifth starter is needed for the second time.
CL
Brandon Lyon
8th Tony Pena
7th
Chad Qualls
LS
Doug Slaten
MR
Juan Cruz
MR
Dustin Nippert
MR
Brandon Medders
Next five: Buckner, Petit, Leo Rosales,
Jailen Peguero,
Emiliano Fruto
It's a good thing he was named the closer last month because Lyon has a 16.20 ERA this spring. Manager Bob Melvin won't have a lot of patience if Lyon's struggles linger into the regular season. It's for good reason that I've had Pena ranked as the game's No. 2 setup man (behind
Carlos Marmol) since camp opened. … If Johnson is on the DL and Gonzalez is in the rotation, the Diamondbacks would have room for both Nippert and Medders on their pitching staff initially. Both are out of options, and the choice between them will likely have to come eventually. Alternatively, the D'backs could trade one of them now and go with 11 pitchers until Johnson returns. They might be frustrated enough with Nippert to sell him off. Even though he has a 14.63 ERA this spring, it's hard to imagine him clearing waivers.
Target: Pena - He's the one of the late-inning reliever with "closer-type stuff," and he pitched well enough last year that Melvin shouldn't hesitate to give him a shot in the ninth.
Avoid: Davis - His WHIP will be a killer even if manages to finesse his way to a respectable win total and ERA for a second year in a row.
Atlanta
Tim Hudson
John Smoltz
Tom Glavine
Mike Hampton
Jair Jurrjens
atlantabraves.com
Next five:
Chuck James,
Buddy Carlyle,
Jo-Jo Reyes,
Jeff Bennett,
Charlie Morton
James has made enough progress in his return from a shoulder injury that he should be ready to take over if Smoltz needs to open the year on the DL. It'll probably be Wednesday or Thursday before Smoltz knows whether his shoulder will allow him to start the season on time. … Regardless, there should be enough innings for James to go around. He's a better choice in NL-only leagues than Glavine or Hampton.
CL
Rafael Soriano
8th
Peter Moylan
7th
Manny Acosta
LS
Will Ohman
MR
Blaine Boyer
MR
Jeff Bennett
MR
Royce Ring
Next five:
Tyler Yates,
Buddy Carlyle,
Chris Resop,
Jeff Ridgway,
Phil Stockman
There were five great bets for the bullpen at the beginning of the spring, but Yates has put his spot in serious jeopardy due to poor command. Now he's battling Boyer, Bennett, Ring, Carlyle and Resop for three openings. Boyer would seem to have the clear edge for one, and it figures that either Bennett or Carlyle will stick as a long man. I have Ring getting the nod for the last spot. Of the six, only Bennett has options left. Carlyle and Resop would have a better chance of clearing waivers than the others. …
Mike Gonzalez is on pace for a June return following Tommy John surgery.
Target: Hudson - As good as his changeup has looked this spring, he might even improve on last year's numbers.
Avoid: Glavine - He was a fine pickup for the Braves, but in fantasy leagues, his ERA shouldn't be good enough to justify living with the weak WHIP and strikeout rate.
Chicago
Carlos Zambrano
Ted Lilly
Ryan Dempster
Rich Hill
Jon Lieber
Next five:
Jason Marquis,
Sean Marshall,
Sean Gallagher,
Kevin Hart,
Neal Cotts
I see the Cubs having their actual No. 4 starter seventh on the depth chart, but their current five should be decent enough as long as Hill's spring control problems are merely an aberration. The key will be how quickly they yank Dempster if/when he struggles. As little reason as there is to believe that he'll be a quality starter, they shouldn't have much patience at all. … Since all indications are that Lieber is going to be the choice for the fifth spot, Marquis could be traded before the end of the week.
CL
Kerry Wood
8th
Carlos Marmol
7th
Bob Howry
LS
Scott Eyre
MR Michael Wuertz
MR
Jason Marquis
MR
Kevin Hart
Next five:
Carmen Pignatiello,
Tim Lahey,
Jose Ascanio,
Juan Mateo,
Billy Petrick
The closer's role will belong to Wood, but Marmol remains the best bet in the Cubs' pen for the full season. … Eyre's sore elbow could get Pignatiello a spot to begin the season. … If Marquis goes, Lahey, a Rule-5 pick, would appear to be the top candidate to replace him.
Target: Zambrano - This is the best I've ever seen him in March.
Avoid: Wood - Would have been a better gamble had he not opened the season as a closer. Even three months of saves could be too much to ask for.
Cincinnati
Aaron Harang
Bronson Arroyo
Johnny Cueto
Josh Fogg
Edinson Volquez
Next five:
Matt Belisle,
Homer Bailey,
Jeremy Affeldt,
Matt Maloney,
Tom Shearn
The probable Opening Day lineup is a major issue, but it looks like the Reds have made all of the right moves with their pitching staff so far. Cueto is definitely a better short-term bet than Bailey, and Affeldt is in the pen where he belongs. While Cueto is receiving too much hype to qualify as a sleeper at this point, Volquez isn't being talked about and has considerable upside for a guy who will go undrafted in a lot of NL-only leagues.
CL
Francisco Cordero
8th
David Weathers
7th
Jared Burton
LS
Mike Stanton
MR
Jeremy Affeldt
MR
Todd Coffey
MR
Bill Bray
Next five:
Matt Belisle,
Gary Majewski,
Kent Mercker,
Marcus McBeth,
Josh Roenicke
Stanton's contract will keep him employed at the start of the year whether he deserves it or not. That means there are two spots for Coffey, Bray, Belisle and Mercker. The guess is that Belisle will go on the disabled list with a sore forearm. Bray has probably done enough to hold off Mercker.
Target: Cueto - It's possible he'll end up with simply too high of a price tag in some auctions, but there are certainly worse last-round picks in mixed leagues.
Avoid: Cordero - In part because he's not in as good of a situation as he was last year, he probably won't provide quite as much value for what he'll cost compared to the NL's other safe picks at closer.
Colorado
Jeff Francis
Aaron Cook
Ubaldo Jimenez
Mark Redman
Josh Towers
Next five:
Franklin Morales,
Kip Wells,
Greg Reynolds,
Victor Zambrano,
Jose Capellan
The last two spots remain up in the air. Wells appears to be out of the mix, but the Rockies could still go with the other veterans and send down Morales. As little as I like the idea of Redman and Towers starting games in Coors, the Rockies might have to play it that way until
Jason Hirsh (shoulder) returns. Morales looks nothing like he did at the end of last year.
CL
Manny Corpas
8th
Brian Fuentes
7th
Luis Vizcaino
MR
Taylor Buchholz
MR
Matt Herges
MR
Kip Wells
MR
Ramon Ramirez
Next five:
Ryan Speier,
Jose Capellan,
Micah Bowie,
Juan Morillo,
Josh Newman
Buchholz is on his way to becoming a very legitimate eighth-inning guy, so if the Rockies can get a reliable starter for Fuentes, they should go ahead and pull the trigger. Cleveland's
Aaron Laffey, an extreme groundballer, could work nicely. … If Morales is in the rotation, then either Redman or Towers figures to get the last bullpen spot. Otherwise, it's between Ramirez and Speier.
Target: Corpas - He may not be any better than Fuentes, but it's unlikely that he'll give the Rockies reason to have the two switch roles again. With Corpas locked up long-term and Fuentes in his walk year, they'd have to be quite desperate to make a change.
Avoid: Morales - I don't know what happened, but he simply doesn't have it right now.
Florida
Mark Hendrickson
Andrew Miller
Ricky Nolasco
Scott Olsen
Rick VandenHurk
Next five:
Chris Volstad,
Gaby Hernandez,
Burke Badenhop,
Doug Waechter,
Dallas Trahern
Sergio Mitre (forearm) is expected to miss at least two months, and
Anibal Sanchez (shoulder) probably won't be back before the break. … Although Nolasco is listed as the third starter, that's just a guess. He's battling VandenHurk, Volstad and Badenhop for two rotation spots. If Olsen (shoulder) is ready to go in the fourth game as expected, the Marlins won't need a fifth starter until April 13. As a result, three of the candidates figure to start off in the minors. Volstad has been best of the candidates this spring, but since he lacks experience and both Nolasco and VandenHurk have been OK, I'm predicting that he'll spend the first couple of months in the minors.
CL
Kevin Gregg
8th
Matt Lindstrom
7th
Taylor Tankersley
7th
Lee Gardner
LS
Renyel Pinto
MR
Justin Miller
MR
Logan Kensing
MR
Joe Nelson
Next five: Badenhop,
Daniel Barone,
Carlos Martinez,
Eulogio De La Cruz, Scott Nestor
With the fifth starter in the minors, the Marlins will have room for an eighth reliever initially. That figures to be Nelson or Badenhop. … Lindstrom will probably get to open the season as the Marlins' top setup man, but he hasn't been nearly as effective as the competition this spring. If his slump continues, then perhaps Kensing would take over as the fallback in the closer's role should Gregg struggle or get traded.
Target: Lindstrom - I don't like the way he's performed this month, but he was the Marlins' best reliever at the end of last year. He remains one of the better sleeper save candidates.
Avoid: Gregg - The Marlins will have every reason to trade him in June or July, and there's a good chance he'd be a setup man elsewhere.
Houston
Roy Oswalt
Wandy Rodriguez
Brandon Backe
Shawn Chacon
Woody Williams
Next five:
Chris Sampson,
Brian Moehler,
Jack Cassel,
Brad James,
Dave Borkowski
Williams' solid outing Sunday means he'll probably get a chance to carry a rotation spot into the regular season. His $6.5 million salary won't save him then if he continues to give up two hits per inning.
CL
Jose Valverde
8th
Doug Brocail
7th
Oscar Villarreal
LS
Wesley Wright
MR
Chris Sampson
MR
Geoff Geary
MR
Brian Moehler
Next five: Borkowski, Cassel,
Chad Paronto,
Ryan Houston,
Mark McLemore
The Astros moved Lidge, then traded one quality reliever for another and now have… umm… one quality reliever. Brocail will start off on middle relief if he can't bounce back this week. The Astros may be forced to mix and match setup men. … Barring a trade, Moehler or Borkowski figures to get the last spot. Moehler has a bizarre 13/0 K/BB ratio in 12 2/3 innings this spring, giving him the edge (at his typical career rate, he'd have seven strikeouts and four walks in that many innings).
Target: None - Wandy would be fine at a buck or two, but he'll likely go for more in most leagues. None of the other non-Oswalt starters projects as an asset.
Avoid: Oswalt - He's not going to collapse this year, but he won't help in WHIP and strikeouts like he used to. Also, below average defenders at shortstop and third will hurt his cause.
Los Angeles
Brad Penny
Derek Lowe
Chad Billingsley
Hiroki Kuroda
Esteban Loaiza
Next five:
Chan Ho Park,
Clayton Kershaw,
Hong-Chih Kuo,
Eric Stults,
James McDonald
The Dodgers' fifth starter with
Jason Schmidt (shoulder) sidelined still hasn't been announced, though Loaiza is expected to be the choice. Kershaw has displayed incredible potential, but he averaged fewer than five innings per start last year and probably isn't going to be allowed to throw more than 150 innings in 2008. It's not his time just yet. Loaiza should do well enough as a stopgap and will be an option in NL-only leagues at the start of the year.
CL
Takashi Saito
8th
Jonathan Broxton
7th
Scott Proctor
7th
Joe Beimel
MR
Hong-Chih Kuo
MR
Rudy Seanez
MR
Chan Ho Park
Next five:
Yhency Brazoban,
Mike Myers,
Eric Hull,
Brian Falkenborg,
Jonathan Meloan
Seanez had had groin troubles, but he still figures to occupy the sixth spot in the pen. The last opening remains a mystery. Brazoban isn't ready, and Myers hasn't done anything this spring. The Dodgers could keep Park as a long man or go to someone like Falkenborg or Ramon Troncoso. My guess is that they'll make a waiver claim if they don't think Park is worth using as a middle reliever.
Target: Billngsley - If his spring struggles take a toll, it'd just make him a better value pick. He's healthy, and his command will come with more work, just like it did last year.
Avoid: Penny - He's probably the weakest investment among the starters, though he doesn't necessarily have to be avoided. Feel free to draft him and trade him before his annual second-half swoon.
Milwaukee
Ben Sheets
Jeff Suppan
Dave Bush
Claudio Vargas
Manny Parra
Next five:
Carlos Villanueva,
Chris Narveson,
Zach Jackson,
Steve Hammond,
Seth McClung
The Brewers opened the spring eight deep, only to lose
Yovani Gallardo (knee) and
Chris Capuano (elbow). Gallardo should return in mid-April, but Capuano is probably out for the season. … With the veterans apparently having clinched openings, it's between Parra and Villanueva for the fifth spot. Both have looked very good, though Parra did get lit up in his last outing. Indications are that Villanueva will be the odd man out initially. Parra, though, could join him at Nashville to make room for Gallardo just a couple of weeks into the season.
CL
Eric Gagne
8th
Derrick Turnbow
7th
David Riske
LS
Brian Shouse
MR
Guillermo Mota
MR
Salomon Torres
MR
Seth McClung
Next five: Villanueva, Narveson, Luis Pena,
Mitch Stetter, Stephen Bray
Turnbow shouldn't really be the eighth-inning guy, but he'll probably get a chance to hold on to the job at the start of the year. Riske will be the Brewers' most reliable reliever, and Mota has been awfully impressive this spring. … McClung is out of options, giving him the edge for the last spot.
Target: Parra - Even if Parra and Villanueva don't have much value early on, they'll likely reward the patient once they receive opportunities.
Avoid: Suppan - He'll eat innings for the Brewers, but he's not likely to help fantasy teams in the process, even though he will benefit from the move to replace
Ryan Braun at third base with
Bill Hall.
New York
Johan Santana
Pedro Martinez
Oliver Perez
John Maine
Mike Pelfrey
newyorkmets.com
Next five:
Tony Armas Jr.,
Jorge Sosa,
Nelson Figueroa,
Adam Bostick,
Brian Stokes
The Mets won't need a fifth starter for the first time until April 12. By that time, they might be able to turn to
Orlando Hernandez, who figures to start off on the disabled list as he continues to build arm strength. If he's still not ready, then Pelfrey could be the choice. Pelfrey, though, needs to work on his secondary pitches in Triple-A. My guess is that the Mets will land themselves an alternative before Opening Day.
CL
Billy Wagner
8th
Aaron Heilman
7th
Matt Wise
7th
Pedro Feliciano
LS
Scott Schoeneweis
MR
Jorge Sosa
MR
Steven Register
Next five:
Brian Stokes,
Joe Smith,
Ruddy Lugo,
Willie Collazo,
Carlos Muniz
The Mets knew what seven relievers they wanted to carry at the beginning of the spring, but
Duaner Sanchez (shoulder) probably won't be ready to go on Opening Day, creating one spot. Register, a Rule-5 pick from Colorado, is the favorite to claim it. However, Stokes is out of options and still has a shot.
Target: Santana - My No. 1 player in NL-only leagues and No. 2 overall.
Avoid: Hernandez - He's typically a nice play in the shallowest of leagues when healthy, but that he altered his delivery to compensate for a sore foot appears to have taken away most of his upside.
Philadelphia
Brett Myers
Cole Hamels
Kyle Kendrick
Jamie Moyer
Adam Eaton
Next five:
Chad Durbin,
J.D. Durbin,
Travis Blackley,
J.A. Happ,
Carlos Carrasco
Friday's strong outing likely clinched a spot for Eaton. He hasn't walked a batter in 12 1/3 innings this spring, which is a nice change from a 2007 season in which he issued 71 walks in 161 2/3 innings. …
Kris Benson (shoulder) could be back to challenge for a job in May or June.
CL
Brad Lidge
8th
Tom Gordon
7th
Ryan Madson
LS
J.C. Romero
MR
Chad Durbin
MR
Clay Condrey
MR
J.D. Durbin
Next five: Blackley,
Gary Knotts,
Vic Darensbourg,
Joe Bisenius,
Fabio Castro
Lidge is still iffy for Opening Day after knee surgery. If he's not ready, then Gordon will close. … If Lidge is healthy, then five spots will be accounted for.
Francisco Rosario (shoulder) seemed like a good bet for the sixth before going down. Now it's between Condrey,
J.D. Durbin, Blackley, Knotts and Darensbourg for two openings. Condrey is the clear favorite for the first. Durbin is out of options and Blackley is a Rule-5 pick, helping their cases. However, there's a good chance the Phillies will make a trade or a waiver claim. It's also possible that they'll choose to carry only 11 pitches, giving them room for
Wes Helms.
Target: Myers - Hamels is the Phillies' true No. 1 starter, of course, but Myers is a threat to fan 200 batters and post an ERA under 4.00.
Avoid: Kendrick - Not enough strikeouts or groundouts. He looks like a long-term fifth starter at best.
Pittsburgh
Ian Snell
Tom Gorzelanny
Paul Maholm
Matt Morris
Zach Duke
Next five: John Van Benchoten,
Bryan Bullington,
Phil Dumatrait, Jarey Wright,
Casey Fossum
The Pirates' rotation has been set since the end of last season, with only an injury or a particularly bad spring from Duke likely to lead to any changes. Of course, there was also the pipe dream of finding a taker for Morris' contract. He'll have to get off to another solid start for that to happen, though.
CL
Matt Capps
8th
Damaso Marte
7th
John Grabow
MR
Sean Burnett
MR
Franquelis Osoria
MR
Evan Meek
MR
Hector Carrasco
Next five: Wright,
Byung-Hyun Kim, Fossum, Dumatrait,
Masumi Kuwata
The bullpen, on the other hand, had just three places set after Torres was traded, with Osoria the clear favorite for the fourth. Burnett is a definite now after posting a 0.90 ERA this spring, but there are still two openings for Meek, Carrasco, Wright, Kim, Fossum and Dumatrait. Kim was supposed to have a hold on one, but he's been terrible so far and might be released this week. As a Rule-5 pick, Meek has a edge for one spot. Carrasco seems like a better bet than Wright and Fossum for the other.
Target: Capps - He probably won't finish among the NL leaders in saves, but he'll help a great deal in WHIP and since the Pirates will get him more work in tie games than most closers, he should be good for four or five wins.
Avoid: Duke - While he should be better than last year, there won't be any miracle turnaround for Duke. As poor of a bet as he will be for strikeouts and wins, he's not even worth a flier.
St. Louis
Adam Wainwright
Todd Wellemeyer
Brad Thompson
Braden Looper
Kyle Lohse
Next five:
Anthony Reyes,
Mitchell Boggs,
Blake Hawksworth,
Jaime Garcia,
Kyle McClellan
The Cards have set up their rotation so that Wellemeyer and Thompson will start the second and third games, even though those are the two candidates to be bumped when
Joel Pineiro (shoulder) returns, hopefully in mid-April. Thompson is probably the favorite to head back to the bullpen then. … All things being equal, it would have made a lot of sense for the Cards to put Reyes in the rotation and keep Thompson in a bullpen short on experience. Still, the Cards felt that strongly that Reyes wouldn't help them. He badly needs a trade. …
Matt Clement (shoulder) and
Mark Mulder (shoulder) might be options for the rotation come May.
CL
Jason Isringhausen
8th
Ryan Franklin
7th
Russ Springer
LS
Randy Flores
MR
Ron Villone
MR
Kyle McClellan
MR
Kelvin Jimenez
Next five: Jason Motte,
Cliff Politte,
Mark Worrell,
Ron Flores,
Chris Perez
McClellan is poised to be one of the biggest surprises to crack an Opening Day roster. The 23-year-old had a 1.81 ERA in 59 2/3 innings between Single-A Palm Beach and Double-A Springfield last season. … Ideally, the Cards will have Thompson or Wellemeyer available in middle relief by mid-April,
Tyler Johnson in his old role by the end of the month and
Josh Kinney back from Tommy John surgery in May.
Target: Lohse - In a pretty good situation for pitchers for the first time in his career, Lohse is an option at up to $3 in NL-only leagues.
Avoid: Looper - Faded as last year went along and hasn't impressed at all this spring.
San Diego
Jake Peavy
Chris Young
Greg Maddux
Randy Wolf
Justin Germano
Next five:
Wilfredo Ledezma,
Glendon Rusch,
Wade LeBlanc,
Shawn Estes,
Tim Stauffer
Peavy clearly wasn't right during his start Friday, but hopefully that was more about a dead arm than any kind of legitimate shoulder problem. He says he's not concerned, so we'll just have to believe him for now. … Fortunately, Estes was terrible right from the start of camp, snuffing out that threat. As a result, it looks like Germano will retain his hold on a rotation spot.
Mark Prior (shoulder) will surely get a crack of the job, if he comes back healthy in May, but no one will be holding their breath for that to happen.
CL
Trevor Hoffman
8th
Heath Bell
7th
Cla Meredith
LS
Joe Thatcher
MR
Kevin Cameron
MR
Glendon Rusch
MR
Wilfredo Ledezma
Next five:
Enrique Gonzalez,
Carlos Guevara, Adam Bass,
Mauro Zarate, Wilton Lopez
Justin Hampson's shoulder injury means there should be room for both Rusch and Ledezma. Gonzalez would seem to be the only threat to overtake one of the lefties. … The Padres may find a way to stash Guevara, a Rule-5 pick from the Reds, on the DL this week.
Target: Young - He's taken measures to overcome his back and oblique problems, and he's throwing quite well this spring.
Avoid: Meredith - After the step back he took last year, it's mostly Petco that gets him even a $1 ranking on my draft lists.
San Francisco
Barry Zito
Matt Cain
Tim Lincecum
Kevin Correia
Jonathan Sanchez
Next five:
Pat Misch,
Nick Pereira,
Victor Santos,
Matt Palmer,
Henry Sosa
Noah Lowry is targeting a mid-April return after wrist surgery earlier this month. Once back, he'll bump either Correia or, more likely, Sanchez to the bullpen. … Correia is dealing with a cranky shoulder, but he's expected to be ready for the season. If not, Misch, a finesse lefty, would be the top candidate to fill in.
CL
Brian Wilson
8th
Tyler Walker
7th
Brad Hennessey
LS
Steve Kline
MR
Merkin Valdez
MR
Jack Taschner
MR
Erick Threets
Next five:
Randy Messenger,
Keiichi Yabu,
Bartolome Fortunato,
Billy Sadler, Santos
Vinnie Chulk is expected to begin the year on the DL with shoulder tendinitis, leaving three openings in the San Francisco pen. Valdez and Taschner seem definite now, with Valdez getting a spot because he's out of options. Threets would seem to have the edge for the other spot for the same reason. If the Giants can find someone to pick up Kline's contract, they'd probably go with Yabu in the seventh spot. Messenger will eventually get his old job back, but the Giants don't think he's ready now.
Target: Cain - Lincecum could be just as effective, but Cain is the better bet of the two to go 200 innings.
Avoid: Zito - Even if pitching in front of what could be the game's best defensive outfield doesn't figure to make Zito anything more than a fourth starter in NL-only leagues.
Washington
Odalis Perez
Jason Bergmann
Tim Redding
Matt Chico
Shawn Hill
Next five:
John Lannan,
Tyler Clippard, Mike O'Connor,
Collin Balester,
Garrett Mock
The surprising move to release
John Patterson apparently set the Nationals' rotation, though the team still hasn't announced whether Chico or Lannan will get the last spot. The team might need both. The hope is that Hill (forearm) will start April 13, the first time the Nationals need a fifth starter, but that's no given, and Redding left his start Sunday due to back spasms.
CL
Chad Cordero
8th
Jon Rauch
7th
Luis Ayala
LS
Ray King
MR
Jesus Colome
MR
Saul Rivera
MR
Joel Hanrahan
MR
Chris Schroder
Next five:
Mike Bacsik,
Jason Stanford,
Arnie Munoz,
Adam Carr,
Steven Shell
That Hill is to open the year on the DL likely saves Schroder for now. Despite his 3.18 ERA in 45 1/3 innings last year, he was expected to return to Triple-A to make room for Hanrahan, who is out of options. The other possibility is that the Nats send Schroder down and go with 11 pitchers until Hill returns.
Target: Rauch - If this is the summer that the Nats finally trade Cordero, Rauch would likely get to take over the closer's role.
Avoid: All of the starters - Hill will likely be solid when healthy, but he can't be counted on for even 20 starts. I like Clippard better than the rest of the bunch.