Earlier this week, I delivered an article identifying 10 impact pickups for the stretch run, figuring it could stand for itself as sort of an all-encompassing, rest-of-season edition of Waiver Wire. After all, those 10 players are still widely available, and they remain your best hope of getting impact for free this late in the season.
But I'm told that more is required, my obligations to the content monster having yet to be fulfilled. Feed me, it bellows as I toss a few croutons its way.
Croutons are all I have left, you see. You've already gotten the meat and potatoes from me, not to mention the bulk of the salad, but your appetite for pickups being what it is, the pantry must be emptied completely.
Still, I feel like I must address, if only one more time, the most impactful of the 10 impact pickups, because they all happened to come up big Tuesday. I'll try to do it quick and dirty so that we can fully dedicate our mouths to those croutons.
First is Ranger Suarez, a ground-ball generating extraordinaire who continues to maintain an ERA around 1.50 even though he joined the starting rotation nine turns ago.
He's scheduled to face the Orioles and Pirates next week, followed by the Marlins in the season's final week, but frankly, the matchups are irrelevant. He's just darn good, and at 74 percent rostership, he's close to being fully appreciated.
Next is Frank Schwindel, who continued his two-month onslaught on major-league pitchers with a 2-for-5 performance Tuesday, which included a home run and a double, .
The 29-year-old is an accomplished minor-leaguer hitter and is making the case that he's more than just a late-season fill-in on a trade-depleted club. The Cubs have some of the best hitter matchups over the final two weeks, too. Schwindel is currently 61 percent rostered.
Finally, let's talk about Nestor Cortes, who's 65 percent rostered and just spun this gem against an unsuspecting Orioles club:
But they should have been suspecting because he's allowed two earned runs or fewer in seven of his past nine starts now. What was different about this one was the strikeout total, his previous high being only seven. Indeed, he has no remarkable numbers other than his 2.60 ERA and 1.05 WHIP, which might explain the widespread hesitance, but his unique throwing style, which involves varying his delivery from pitch to pitch, seems to keep hitters off balance.
OK, now for the table scraps.
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September 16, 2021 at 08:41PM
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Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Andrew Benintendi, Miguel Sano showing they have something left - CBS Sports
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