Target these two under-the-radar pitchers in fantasy baseball trade talks

The current landscape of starting pitching in fantasy baseball is in an absolute state of emergency.We have reached a crisis point where more than 75 percent of the consensus preseason top-20 are either on the injured list or completely destroying your fantasy rosters with miserable underperformance. Top-tier arms are dropping like flies, leaving fantasy managers scrambling to fill rotation spots.

Looking to fix this problem strictly through the waiver wire is incredibly risky.Blindly streaming unproven arms can instantly wreck your ERA and WHIP ratios.

Instead, it is time to pivot and actively build trade targets. While everyone else in your league is trying to sell their entire roster for a premium superstar such as Paul Skenes, your best path to victory is hunting for under-the-radar hurlers who can provide elite production at a fraction of the cost.It is time to open trade negotiations for pitchers like Max Meyer of the Marlins and Davis Martin of the White Sox. Meyer has quietly emerged as an incredibly consistent breakout arm.

His roster rate is currently sitting at 51 percent in Yahoo leagues, and he represents the perfect target before his price skyrockets into the mainstream. The 27-year-old right-hander is backing up his success with legitimate skills.Across 42 innings, he has pitched to a sparkling 2.79 ERA supported by an elite 2.88 FIP.

He has significantly fixed his historical long-ball issues, reducing his HR/9 rate down to a stellar 0.40.His 25.6 percent strikeout rate paired with an 8.5 percent walk rate demonstrates robust command, and his premier slider continues to generate an eye-popping 50.8 pecent whiff rate.

He is keeping the ball in the yard and generating misses, making him a reliable ratio stabilizer. If you want an even deeper target who is currently pitching like an AL Cy Young contender, look directly at Davis Martin.He is rostered in 80 percent of Yahoo leagues, but his managers might still view him as a temporary flash in t...

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Publisher: New York Post

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