Mickey Moniak is the clear priority add this morning — the Rockies outfielder is slashing .348 with a .439 wOBA over the last seven days, backed by a 94.8 mph average exit velocity and 60.8% hard-hit rate. His strikeout rate has plummeted from 22.4% to 16.0% in a week while his walk rate nearly doubled from 4.5% to 8.0%. At 28% ownership and climbing fast (+5% in seven days), the window to grab him for free is closing.

Today's Top Adds

Mickey Moniak (OF, COL) — Add Now

Moniak is flashing the kind of multi-signal breakout that demands immediate action. The wOBA surge from .394 over 30 days to .439 in the last week is impressive on its own, but the underlying process changes matter more: a strikeout rate dropping from 22.4% to 16.0% paired with a walk rate climbing from 4.5% to 8.0% suggests a real approach adjustment, not just a hot streak. The 94.8 mph exit velocity and 60.8% hard-hit rate confirm he's squaring balls up consistently. With 25 plate appearances across five games, this isn't a two-at-bat mirage. He's playing every day in a lineup that calls Coors Field home. At 28% rostered and rising, he's the kind of add you'll be kicking yourself for missing by the weekend.

Watch List

Spencer Horwitz (1B, PIT) — Watch

Horwitz is posting video-game numbers over the last seven days: a .429 average, .519 wOBA, and 94.5 mph exit velocity. His strikeout rate dropped from 18.1% to 11.8% while his walk rate ticked up to 17.6%. The only thing keeping him out of the "Add Now" tier is 2% ownership and the lack of a clear everyday role confirmation. If he keeps getting regular at-bats at this approach quality, he won't stay at 2% for long.

Keaton Winn (SP/RP, SF) — Watch

A 57.1% strikeout rate over the last seven days — up from 37.1% over 30 days — with a -0.38 FIP. Yes, that FIP is negative. The sample is tiny and this is still an early signal across five games, but when a pitcher is missing bats at that rate, you pay attention. Monitor his next start closely; if the K rate holds above 35%, he becomes a priority add in all formats.

Jonah Heim (C, ATL) — Watch

Heim's 102.2 mph average exit velocity and 100% hard-hit rate over the past week are eye-popping, driving a .411 wOBA surge from a .294 30-day mark. The catcher position is a wasteland, so any signal this strong deserves a bookmark. Still an early signal at 0% ownership — the next week will tell us if this is real or a three-game heater.

Jack Perkins (SP/RP, ATH) — Watch

A 2.35 FIP with 5.3 innings over the last week for an unrostered Oakland arm. Not enough volume to act on, but the FIP suggests quality stuff. Worth a speculative add in deeper leagues if he earns a rotation spot.

Cole Winn (RP, TEX) — Watch

The K rate is spiking — 33.3% over seven days, up from 24.5% over 30 — and the 0.93 FIP is elite. But the 11.74 ERA screams that he's been burned by sequencing and hard contact in limited situations. The strikeout stuff is tantalizing, but you can't roster an 11.74 ERA reliever on hope alone. Watch for the ERA to normalize toward that FIP before making a move.

Brett Baty (2B/3B/OF, NYM) — Watch

Baty's 7-day wOBA of .348 is a significant jump from his brutal .224 mark over 30 days. The process improvements are real: strikeout rate down from 30.6% to 18.2%, walk rate exploding from 4.2% to 27.3%. The .250 average and 92.2 mph exit velocity suggest the results haven't fully caught up to the plate discipline gains yet. Multi-position eligibility adds value. If the K rate stays below 20%, he's a sneaky add in 12-team leagues next week.

Luke Weaver (RP, NYM) — Watch

Zero earned runs allowed over the past week with a 2.19 FIP and a K rate climbing from 16.7% to 25.0%. Weaver has been a trusted high-leverage arm, and if the Mets keep giving him save or hold opportunities, the ratios alone make him useful in categories leagues. At 8% ownership, he's available almost everywhere.

Cole Young (2B, SEA) — Watch

Young's strikeout rate has dropped sharply from 22.5% to 14.3%, and he's logging heavy playing time with 28 plate appearances in seven days. The 90.2 mph exit velocity and 58.3% hard-hit rate show decent contact quality for a middle infielder. The .294 wOBA isn't exciting yet, but the approach gains and guaranteed at-bats make him a watchlist staple in deeper formats.

Jose Fernandez (1B/SS, AZ) — Watch

Fernandez checks every underlying box: strikeout rate down from 23.2% to 15.0%, walk rate up from 2.9% to 10.0%, a 97.3 mph exit velocity, and a 66.7% hard-hit rate. The .333 wOBA over seven days is stable rather than surging, but the contact quality and plate discipline improvements suggest a breakout is brewing. The 1B/SS dual eligibility is fantasy gold. With 20 plate appearances in the last week, he's locked into the Arizona lineup.

Stream of the Day

No streaming-specific signals emerged from today's data. The pitching matchup landscape didn't produce a clear one-start or one-week play worth chasing. Check back tomorrow — we'll have fresh pitching matchups to target for the weekend slate.

Ownership Movers

Mickey Moniak (+5% to 28%) is the only meaningful mover this cycle, and the surge is entirely justified. A .439 wOBA, declining K rate, rising walk rate, and elite exit velocity across five games make the ownership climb look like it's just getting started. The rest of today's signals — Jack Perkins, Spencer Horwitz, Keaton Winn, and Jonah Heim — sit near 0-3% ownership with no movement yet. That's the opportunity: these are the names that could be +10% by this time next week if the signals hold. Being early on watchlist names is how you win waiver priority battles.

Quick Hits

  • Jonah Heim's 102.2 mph average exit velocity over the last seven days is the hardest-hit mark on today's entire report. For a catcher. If you're streaming the position week-to-week, put his name in ink.
  • Jose Fernandez's 97.3 mph EV and 66.7% hard-hit rate are elite-tier contact numbers. The 1B/SS eligibility alone makes him a stash candidate in any format with positional flexibility needs.
  • Brett Baty's walk rate jumped from 4.2% to 27.3% in one week. That's an absurd swing, and while it will regress, even settling at 12-15% would represent a meaningful plate discipline upgrade that could unlock his power upside.
  • Keaton Winn's negative FIP (-0.38) is mathematically possible but almost never seen in practice. It means the strikeouts are so dominant relative to walks and home runs allowed that the formula goes below zero. Small sample, but that's absurd swing-and-miss stuff.
  • The catcher position is screaming for attention: Heim at 0% ownership and Shea Langeliers, Drake Baldwin, and Cal Raleigh are all names on our radar. If your current backstop is dragging your lineup down, the wire has options.