Cole Carrigg is hitting .476 with a .544 wOBA over the past week, his ownership has spiked 14 percentage points in seven days, and he's still available in 72% of leagues. If you haven't moved yet, today is the last comfortable window. Below, the full breakdown of ten rising signals from the last 24 hours.

Today's Top Adds

Cole Carrigg (OF, COL) — 28% Owned

The 7-day wOBA surge tells the story: .544 over his last 5 games against a .407 mark over the trailing 30 days. That's not a small blip — it's a player whose bat-to-ball skills are sharpening in real time, with his strikeout rate plummeting from 17.7% to 12.5% over the same window. He's batting .476 with a homer and has logged 24 plate appearances in the last week, so this isn't a pinch-hit mirage. Ownership jumped 14% in seven days and is accelerating. The Coors factor is baked in, but the contact quality is legitimate. Add now before the next wave of adds pushes him past 40%.

Curtis Mead (1B/2B/3B, WSH) — 21% Owned

Multi-position eligibility plus a .508 wOBA week is the kind of combination that doesn't stay on waivers long. Mead's 7-day line — .435 AVG, 1 HR, 90.3 mph exit velocity — represents a massive jump from his .313 wOBA over the last 30 days. The process looks real: strikeout rate down from 21.3% to 16.0%, walk rate up from 6.4% to 8.0%, and half his batted balls qualifying as hard hit. He's had 25 plate appearances across 5 games, confirming everyday usage. At 21% ownership with only a 2% weekly gain, the market hasn't caught up yet. That's your edge.

Jakob Marsee (OF, MIA) — 56% Owned

Marsee is already rostered in the majority of leagues, but his ownership actually dipped 4% over the past week — right as his bat woke up. His wOBA soared from .267 over 30 days to .451 over the last 7, powered by a 100% hard-hit rate and 95.0 mph exit velocity. The plate discipline shift is dramatic: strikeout rate cut from 22.1% to 9.5% while his walk rate climbed from 9.6% to 14.3%. Managers who dropped him during the cold stretch are going to regret it. If he's somehow available in your league, he's the most talented player on this list.

Watch List

Jared Triolo (1B/2B/3B/SS, PIT) — 1% Owned

A four-position eligible bat at 1% ownership flashing a 97.2 mph exit velocity, 66.7% hard-hit rate, and a strikeout rate that's been halved from 22.8% to 10.0% in a week. The .379 wOBA won't blow the doors off, but the contact quality and discipline trajectory are worth monitoring for another week. If the power shows up, this becomes an add.

Jordan Romano (RP, COL) — 3% Owned

Zero earned runs and a 0.77 FIP over his last 5 appearances with a 38.5% strikeout rate (15 K/9). Still an early signal, and the Coors context applies, but the swing-and-miss stuff is undeniable. Watch for save opportunities to materialize.

Brent Headrick (RP, NYY) — 3% Owned

A 50.0% strikeout rate over the past week — up from 29.4% over 30 days — paired with a -0.16 FIP and a 0.00 ERA. Those are minuscule sample sizes, but a reliever punching out half the batters he faces in a Yankees uniform is worth a roster stash in deeper leagues. The strikeout surge could stick.

Elias Díaz (C, TEX) — 0% Owned

Two home runs in 5 games from a catcher rostered in literally zero percent of leagues. Díaz posted a .428 wOBA with a .316 average while striking out in just 5.0% of plate appearances. Catcher is a wasteland — a bat-first option with 20 PA in a week deserves a look, especially with Shea Langeliers and Samuel Basallo likely locked in elsewhere.

Mason Montgomery (SP/RP, PIT) — 2% Owned

A 71.4% strikeout rate over the past week with a -1.25 FIP. Those numbers are absurd even in a tiny sample. Montgomery's 30-day K rate of 44.1% was already elite — the recent surge suggests he's found another gear. If Pittsburgh gives him rotation opportunities, the ownership floor rises fast.

Brett Sullivan (C, COL) — 0% Owned

Zero strikeouts in the last 7 days (down from 8.6% over 30), a 75.0% hard-hit rate, and 93.2 mph exit velocity. A .369 wOBA from a zero-percent-owned catcher is interesting, but the small sample keeps this firmly on the watch list. Coors helps.

Will Klein (RP, LAD) — 3% Owned

A 0.00 ERA and 0.98 FIP with a 35.7% strikeout rate (13.64 K/9) in a Dodgers bullpen that funnels high-leverage innings to effective arms. Still early, but the K-rate trend is rising and the FIP supports the results.

Stream of the Day

No streaming-specific signals triggered today — the algorithm didn't flag any spot starters or matchup-driven plays for the next 48 hours. If you need a stream, Mason Montgomery is worth monitoring for his next start date given the ridiculous strikeout numbers, but there's no confirmed start to target. Check back tomorrow.

Ownership Movers

  • Cole Carrigg (28%, +14% 7d): The biggest mover of the cycle and fully justified. A .544 wOBA with consistent playing time and a cratering K-rate is the exact profile that goes from 28% to 60% in a week. The market is right to chase this one.
  • Curtis Mead (21%, +2% 7d): Only a 2-point gain despite a .508 wOBA week feels like a market inefficiency. The multi-position eligibility alone should drive more interest. This gap between production and ownership won't last.
  • Jared Triolo (1%, stable): The ownership hasn't budged, which is predictable given no home runs, but the 97.2 mph exit velocity and discipline shift suggest the counting stats are coming. At 1%, there's zero cost to stashing him.
  • Jordan Romano (3%, stable): A former closer posting a 0.77 FIP and 15 K/9 shouldn't be at 3%. If he's one closer injury or trade away from save chances, the ownership spike will be instant.
  • Brent Headrick (3%, stable): Flat ownership on a pitcher striking out half the batters he faces. Small sample, but the Yankees affiliation means a longer leash than most. Worth the speculative add in 12+ team leagues.

Quick Hits

  • Jakob Marsee's 100% hard-hit rate over the last 7 days is the highest quality mark on today's board. Every ball he put in play was hit hard at 95.0 mph. His ownership dropping 4% while that's happening is a gift.
  • Mason Montgomery's 71.4% K-rate is the kind of number that looks like a data error — it's not. Even his 30-day rate of 44.1% was absurd. He's a reliever-eligible arm generating whiffs at a historic clip in a small window.
  • The catcher wire is alive: Elias Díaz (.428 wOBA, 2 HR) and Brett Sullivan (.369 wOBA, 0% K-rate) are both unowned and producing. If your current catcher is batting under .220, these are free upgrades.
  • Jared Triolo's 97.2 mph exit velocity is the hardest average contact on today's hitter list, including players with far higher ownership. The power hasn't shown up in home runs yet, but that EV combined with a 10.0% strikeout rate points to an imminent breakout.
  • Three relievers posted a 0.00 ERA this weekRomano, Headrick, and Klein — and all three are owned in 3% of leagues or fewer. If you're punting saves and chasing ratios, any of them will help.