Noah Cameron is the hottest arm on the wire right now — a 1.79 FIP and 33.3% strikeout rate over his last 13 innings, and he's still sitting at 44% ownership. If he's available in your league, you're late. But probably not too late.

Today's Top Adds

Noah Cameron (SP, KC) — 44% Owned

Cameron has been electric over the past week: a 0.69 ERA across 13.0 innings pitched with a 10.38 K/9. The surface stats are shiny, but the underlying data is what matters here — that 1.79 FIP says the results are real, not luck-driven. His strikeout rate has jumped from 26.7% over the past 30 days to 33.3% in the last seven, which signals a possible mechanical or pitch-mix adjustment that's clicking. Ownership has surged 24 percentage points in the last week. This is a five-game sample, so temper expectations slightly, but the signal-to-noise ratio is strong enough to act immediately. He won't be a free add by this weekend.

Carson Benge (OF, NYM) — 42% Owned

Benge is destroying the baseball. A .575 wOBA over the past week with a 98.6 mph average exit velocity and 71.1% hard-hit rate — those are elite contact quality numbers. He's slashed .429 with 3 home runs in 22 plate appearances. The 30-day wOBA was already a healthy .371, so this isn't a cold bat suddenly getting lucky; it's a productive hitter reaching another gear. Ownership jumped 13 points in the last seven days and is accelerating. In deeper leagues, he may already be gone.

Kody Clemens (1B/2B/OF, MIN) — 8% Owned

Here's your deep-league gem. Clemens is hitting .350 with 2 home runs over the past week, posting a .456 wOBA backed by a 97.3 mph exit velocity and a 77.1% hard-hit rate. The multi-position eligibility (1B, 2B, OF) makes him a roster construction dream. At 8% ownership he's essentially free in every format, and his 30-day wOBA of .398 confirms this isn't a one-week mirage — he's been building toward this. The 4-point ownership climb in seven days means the wave is just starting. Get ahead of it.

Andrew Vaughn (1B, MIL) — 28% Owned

Vaughn's profile this week is textbook buy-low: a .454 wOBA, .391 average, 98.3 mph exit velocity, and 86.7% hard-hit rate with consistent playing time (23 PA). He's also cut his strikeout rate from 10.8% over 30 days to 8.7% in the last seven, meaning he's making more contact and hitting the ball harder. The ownership hasn't budged — still 28% — which means the market is asleep on him. That's your window.

Gabriel Moreno (C, AZ) — 36% Owned

The average (.235) doesn't scream "add me," but everything underneath does. Moreno posted a .371 wOBA with a 97.4 mph exit velocity and an 88.9% hard-hit rate — the highest hard-hit quality of any player in today's report. His strikeout rate cratered from 16.9% to 9.5% while his walk rate climbed from 9.6% to 14.3%. That's an elite plate discipline shift at a position where offense is scarce. The BABIP correction is coming, and when it does, you'll wish you'd grabbed him at 36% ownership. Catcher is shallow enough that Moreno's underlying quality makes him a must-add over the likes of Hunter Goodman or any streamer-level backstop you're currently rostering.

Watch List

Kyle Higashioka (C, TEX) — 1% Owned

A .581 wOBA, .500 batting average, 98.9 mph exit velocity, and a strikeout rate that dropped from 20.0% to 7.1% — in any other context, this is a screaming add. But at 1% ownership and with limited plate appearances, this is still an early signal. If you're in a two-catcher league, stash him now. Everyone else, monitor for one more week of data.

Garrett Mitchell (OF, MIL) — 5% Owned

Mitchell's strikeout rate improvement is the headline: down from 37.0% to 29.2%. It's still high, but the trend matters. He's posted a .351 wOBA with a 95.5 mph exit velocity and consistent at-bats (24 PA). If the K-rate keeps dropping, the power and speed will play. Not there yet.

Sam Bachman (RP, LAA) — 2% Owned

A 44.4% strikeout rate over the last week with a 0.93 FIP and a 0.00 ERA. That's a 15.65 K/9. The sample is tiny and he's a reliever, which limits his ceiling, but if he's working toward save or hold opportunities, he could be a ratio-boosting weapon. Track the role.

Dominic Canzone (OF, SEA) — 7% Owned

Canzone is hitting .500 with a .550 wOBA and has slashed his strikeout rate from 18.6% to 10.5%. The 92.7 mph exit velocity is the one concern — it's below the threshold where you trust the power to sustain. Worth watching to see if the contact quality catches up to the results.

Bryan Abreu (RP, HOU) — 22% Owned

A 50.0% strikeout rate and 18.0 K/9 is absurd, but the 6.75 ERA means he's giving up runs between punchouts. His ownership actually dipped 3 points. The swing-and-miss stuff is clearly there — if the ERA stabilizes, he'll be a top reliever add. Hold if you have him, but don't chase the K-rate alone.

Stream of the Day

No streaming-specific signals emerged from today's data. With no pitcher matchup triggers or short-term streaming plays flagged, your best bet is to prioritize the top adds above — particularly Noah Cameron as a rotation piece rather than a one-start stream. His 13.0 innings over the past seven days suggests he's stretched out and delivering starter-level volume. Check back tomorrow for matchup-based streaming options.

Ownership Movers

  • Noah Cameron (+24% to 44%): Fully justified. The FIP, strikeout rate, and workload all support the surge. This is the market catching up to real production.
  • Carson Benge (+13% to 42%): Justified. A .575 wOBA with 71.1% hard-hit quality and 3 home runs in a week will do that. The 30-day baseline (.371 wOBA) shows this isn't a fluke — it's acceleration.
  • Kody Clemens (+4% to 8%): Criminally under-owned relative to his production. The 77.1% hard-hit rate and positional flexibility should have him at 20%+ by next week.
  • Kyle Higashioka (+1% to 1%): The numbers are gaudy but the sample is razor-thin. The market is right to be cautious here — for now.
  • Andrew Vaughn (unchanged at 28%): The market is wrong. An 86.7% hard-hit rate with declining strikeouts and a .454 wOBA should be driving ownership up. This is a market inefficiency — exploit it.

Quick Hits

  • Moreno's 88.9% hard-hit rate is the highest among all flagged hitters today, yet his .235 average suggests a BABIP correction is imminent. He's also the only player showing simultaneous improvement in both strikeout rate (down to 9.5%) and walk rate (up to 14.3%) — a rare dual-indicator of a breakout.
  • Sam Bachman's 0.93 FIP is the lowest among all pitchers in today's report, edging out even Cameron's 1.79. The 44.4% K-rate (up from 25.0% over 30 days) suggests a potential velocity or arsenal change worth investigating.
  • Exit velocity leaders today: Higashioka (98.9 mph), Benge (98.6 mph), Vaughn (98.3 mph), Moreno (97.4 mph), and Clemens (97.3 mph). All five are available in most leagues. That's unusual — typically at least two or three EV leaders in a given week are 80%+ owned.
  • Bryan Abreu's K-rate nearly doubled in seven days — from 26.2% to 50.0%. That kind of swing-and-miss spike in a reliever usually signals either a new pitch gaining traction or a shift in usage patterns. The 6.75 ERA keeps him on the watch list rather than the add list, but the upside is enormous if the walks and hard contact normalize.
  • Canzone and Benge are both hitting .500 over the past week but with wildly different exit velocity profiles — 92.7 mph vs. 98.6 mph. Benge's power is sustainable. Canzone's average is not. Act accordingly.