Daily Waiver Report — Sunday, June 28, 2026

Denzer Guzman is posting a .512 wOBA over the last seven days with a 92.2 mph exit velocity, 66.7% hard-hit rate, and a walk rate that has more than doubled from 8.3% to 17.6% — and he's sitting at just 4% ownership. That's the sharpest signal on the board this morning. He headlines a watch list that's unusually deep for a Sunday, with ten emerging names flashing real underlying quality. No players crossed the threshold into Add Now territory today, but several are close enough that waiting another 48 hours could cost you the pickup.

Today's Top Adds

No players triggered Add Now signals in the past 24 hours. The watch list below is loaded, though, and multiple names are one more strong game from crossing the line. Stay ready on your waiver priority.

Watch List

Denzer Guzman (3B/SS, LAA) — 4% owned

The most exciting line on today's sheet. Guzman's seven-day wOBA of .512 dwarfs his .346 over 30 days, backed by a .357 batting average, two home runs, and a hard-hit rate of 66.7%. His strikeout rate has ticked down to 17.6% while his walk rate has surged to 17.6% — a perfect mirror that signals elite plate discipline emerging. Ownership is up 3% in a week. If he keeps this up through Monday, he's an Add Now on Tuesday's report.

Trevor Larnach (OF, MIN) — 6% owned

Larnach is hitting .429 over the past week with a .470 wOBA and a strikeout rate that has cratered from 17.3% to 6.2%. The hard-hit rate of 43.3% and 86.8 mph exit velocity temper the enthusiasm — the results are outpacing the quality of contact right now. Still, a 6.2% K-rate over five games suggests he's seeing the ball exceptionally well. The approach is real even if the power profile hasn't caught up yet.

Anthony Volpe (SS, NYY) — 7% owned

Volpe is barreling everything. A 100.5 mph average exit velocity with a 75.0% hard-hit rate is elite-level contact quality. His seven-day wOBA sits at .369 with a .353 average and a walk rate up to 10.5%. Those exit velocity numbers suggest the power is about to show up in a big way. At 7% ownership with that kind of batted-ball data, he's the watch list name most likely to break out this week.

Tyler Stephenson (C, CIN) — 5% owned

Zero strikeouts over five games. Stephenson posted a .364 average with a .422 wOBA, a 63.9% hard-hit rate, and 91.8 mph exit velocity. His K-rate dropping from 23.0% to 0.0% is obviously unsustainable, but the underlying contact quality — paired with one home run — makes him a high-priority catcher add if this carries into the week. Catcher waivers are a wasteland, and a 5%-owned option with a .422 wOBA deserves attention.

Coby Mayo (1B/3B, BAL) — 2% owned

Mayo's surface stats are ugly — .167 average — but the process is improving. His strikeout rate has dropped from 38.4% to 30.0%, his walk rate has climbed from 4.1% to 10.0%, and he has 20 plate appearances in the last seven days confirming consistent playing time. The 91.5 mph exit velocity shows the raw power is there. This is a deep-league stash for managers betting on the plate discipline gains sticking.

Kahlil Watson (OF, CLE) — 1% owned

Watson's 40.0% strikeout rate is still a problem, but it's down from 47.6% — and the contact he is making is loud. A 95.3 mph exit velocity and 58.3% hard-hit rate point to serious raw power. His wOBA jumped from .238 to .333 with a .267 average and a homer. The K-rate needs to come under 30% before this becomes actionable. Deep-league only for now.

Brad Lord (SP/RP, WSH) — 4% owned

Lord is the lone pitching signal today — a 37.5% strikeout rate over the past seven days, up from 26.8% over 30 days, with 6.3 innings pitched. That's a meaningful K-rate spike with a usable workload. Monitor his next start to see if the swing-and-miss is real or a one-week blip.

Tristan Peters (OF, CWS) — 2% owned

Peters quietly posted a .476 wOBA with a .385 average, one homer, a 6.2% K-rate, and a 12.5% walk rate. The exit velocity (90.5 mph) and hard-hit rate (45.0%) don't blow you away, but that discipline profile — strikeouts dropping from 12.0% while walks climb from 6.7% — is a real foundation. He's doing this on the White Sox, so the lineup context isn't great, but the individual skill set is emerging.

Jacob Gonzalez (1B/2B/SS, CWS) — 2% owned

Multi-position eligibility plus a strikeout rate plummeting from 26.2% to 8.3% is a compelling combination. Gonzalez has a .401 wOBA and .273 average with one home run over the past week. The 41.7% hard-hit rate is modest, but the discipline improvement is dramatic enough to warrant a watch.

Dominic Canzone (OF, SEA) — 19% owned

Canzone's ownership is actually dropping — down 10% in a week — but the underlying data says managers are making a mistake. A 101.3 mph exit velocity and 66.7% hard-hit rate are elite. His walk rate has surged to 25.0%, and his wOBA sits at .422 despite a .167 batting average. This is a classic case where the box score lies. The batted-ball data screams positive regression. If you dropped him, consider picking him back up.

Stream of the Day

No streaming-specific signals triggered today. Brad Lord is the closest candidate with his 37.5% K-rate spike, but we need to see his next scheduled start and matchup before issuing a streaming recommendation. Check back tomorrow.

Ownership Movers

  • Denzer Guzman (4%, +3%): Absolutely justified. A .512 wOBA with power and discipline is the real deal until proven otherwise.
  • Trevor Larnach (6%, +3%): The move makes sense given the .429 average, though the soft exit velocity (86.8 mph) is a yellow flag for sustainability.
  • Anthony Volpe (7%, +2%): Underpriced. The 100.5 mph exit velocity and 75.0% hard-hit rate mean this ownership number should be climbing faster.
  • Coby Mayo (2%, +0%): Stable ownership despite improving plate discipline. The .167 average is scaring people off, but the walk rate gains are real.
  • Tyler Stephenson (5%, +0%): Surprising that ownership hasn't moved at all given a zero-strikeout week at catcher. That changes if he stays hot through the weekend.

Quick Hits

  • Dominic Canzone's 101.3 mph exit velocity is the highest on today's board, yet he's the only player whose ownership is falling. Batting average is lying to your leaguemates — take advantage.
  • Anthony Volpe's 75.0% hard-hit rate leads all watch list hitters and pairs with the second-highest exit velocity (100.5 mph) among today's names. That power hasn't materialized into homers yet — zero in five games — which means the upside is still coiled.
  • Tyler Stephenson went an entire five-game stretch without a strikeout. For a catcher position where the waiver bar is underground, a .422 wOBA at 5% ownership is practically a gift.
  • Kahlil Watson's 95.3 mph exit velocity is tantalizing, but a 40.0% strikeout rate keeps him firmly in deep-league-only territory. The swing-and-miss has to come down before the power plays in standard formats.
  • Two White Sox — Tristan Peters and Jacob Gonzalez — are flashing improved plate discipline simultaneously. Peters cut his K-rate to 6.2%; Gonzalez dropped to 8.3%. Chicago's lineup won't provide counting stat upside, but these are individual skill improvements worth monitoring if either gets traded to a contender.