Chris Towers' early-season Fantasy Baseball 2026 rankings movers: Biggest risers and fallers after Week 1
Chris Towers' early-season Fantasy Baseball 2026 rankings movers: Biggest risers and fallers after Week 1
These players have made an impression early -- for better or worse
By
Chris Towers
Apr 2, 2026
at
6:29 pm ET
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6 min read
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Spoiler alert: I don't tend to be aggressive with rankings moves for the first month of the season. This annoys some Fantasy Baseball players who want to see players shooting up and down the rankings based on their most recent level of production, but that just isn't how I view things.
In fact, I think it's the wrong way to view things. If you liked a player enough to draft him two weeks ago – especially enough to draft him as a top-200 players – very little that we've seen so far should change your opinion of them.
Now, I will admit: That's more true for moving players down than for moving them up, something I'm more willing to do. Oh sure, I won't fundamentally change how I view anyone a week or so into the season, almost regardless of what we've seen. Any player can get hot for a week or two only for it to eventually not mean anything, and any player can get cold for a week or more and not have it change how you view them.
But that's not to say I'm totally unwilling to make any changes. I'll be updating my rankings every week between now and the end of the season, and even now there are tweaks to be made. Scott White wrote about his biggest rankings moves for the first week of the season Thursday for CBSSports.com, and many of his moves reflect my own. My first Trade Values charts of the season were also published Thursday, and to go along with that, I've got five rankings movers to highlight here – four up, and only one down.
Four moving up
Cam Schlittler, SP, Yankees
This might be the guy I'm having the most FOMO on so far this season. It's not just the results through starts as much as it is the fact that the stuff looks even more overwhelming than it did during his successful rookie season. He has held on to the velocity gains with his fastballs while adding even more heat with his cutter, giving him three separate pitches in the 94-99 mph range with three different movement profiles – the cutter is like the four-seamer but with five more inches of drop, while the sinker is like the cutter with an extra 10 inches of arm-side movement.
And he's throwing those pitches around 90% of the time right now, with nearly equal usage across the three of them, so … good luck, opposing hitters, especially when he still has a curveball and slider that look like pretty good pitches in their own right. I don't know if Schlittler can sustain an elite strikeout rate while leaning so heavily on three fastballs, but I think his 28% strikeout rate as a rookie is reasonable, and he might be one of the toughest pitchers to barrel up with this new approach. I think we're not far from Schlittler being in the discussion for a top-15 SP spot.
Kodai Senga, SP, Mets
I didn't take reports of Senga's improved velocity seriously enough this spring, but he looked like a legitimately different pitcher in his first start. His 97.5 mph average fastball velo in that start was the highest in any MLB start to date for him, and it led to six of his nine strikeouts in the opener, with his elite forkball taking care of the other three punchouts. The velocity may not stick. His injury woes may crop up again. Or the iffy command Senga has always dealt with could derail things. But I came out of last season with nearly nonexistent expectations for Senga, and after his spring and then just one start, I'm back on board with him as at least a useful Fantasy option. Maybe more.
Isaac Paredes, 3B, Astros
The question was about playing time, and now Paredes has started six of the first seven games for the Astros. He's been helped along by the fact that Jeremy Pena isn't playing on back-to-back days yet, so the crunch could still come for Pares, especially if Christian Walker continues to out-hit him. But it's not like Paredes has been bad – we haven't seen a ball go over the fence for him, but he's sporting a .346 OBP with four doubles in six games, so it's not like he's been a non-factor. The Astros have already been willing to play Yordan Alvarez in the outfield a few times this season, and if he proves capable of handling that regularly, the playing time could be there for Paredes. That's one of the most important trends of the first week.
Taj Bradley, SP, Twins
I've never been a big believer in Bradley, but it's never been for a lack of arm talent. And he seems to have leveled up a bit in the early going, as Matthew Trueblood of TwinsDaily.com noted in a recent article. In his first start, basically the entire arsenal rated out as above-average, something that hasn't exactly been true throughout his career despite the glimpses of high upside we've seen from him. He didn't miss a ton of bats in his second start of the season against the Twins, but he commanded the ball well and limited them to