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While all 30 MLB teams will be in action this evening, DraftKings’ featured DFS slate will only include the 10 games getting going past 7:05 p.m. ET. You know, so you can finish up your dinner or go for a jog before things get underway. Or whatever it is you do. I don’t know your life.
Let’s find some values for your lineups.
Set your DraftKings MLB DFS lineups here: MLB $200K Sinker de Mayo [$50K to 1st]
You know… Walker Buehler actually hasn’t been that bad this season.
The 31-year-old right-hander technically owns a 5.40 ERA across 25.0 innings of work in 2026, but a lot of that inflated figure can be chalked up to a single poor outing in Colorado. Even including that start, Buehler sports a 3.42 FIP entering play on Tuesday. He’s struck out 24 opponents in his six appearances and he’s conceded just a 3.9% opponent barrel rate. If not for some unluckiness with his opponent BABIP (.347) and his strand rate (65.7%), dare I say that Buehler would be downright valuable for the Padres at the moment.
Still, I’m burying the lede here. Buehler’s viability on tonight’s slate comes down to his microscopic price tag and his matchup. The Giants are arguably the worst lineup in baseball. There might not even be an argument, as the club ranks dead-last in ISO (.116), dead-last in OBP (.287) and 29th in wRC+ (82). Add in the always pitcher-friendly Oracle Park, and I think Buehler has to be part of your player pool.
It’s been a little under the radar, but the White Sox sneakily have had one of the most productive lineups in baseball over the past couple of weeks. In fact, if you go all the way back to April 12, Chicago ranks second in baseball in expected wOBA (.365), fourth in wRC+ (124) and fifth in ISO (.192). This group of kids can hit
Tonight, the club will look to put up some more crooked numbers against Sam Aldegheri ($6,400), who will be making his first start of 2026 and just his second overall appearance. Over 28.1 MLB innings in his brief career, the southpaw owns a 6.35 ERA with a 7.07 FIP and he’s surrendered a whopping 1.91 opponent home runs per nine. Don’t seem ideal! Meidroth should get first crack at the Italian-born lefty, as the infielder continues to serve has the White Sox’s leadoff man versus LHPs. It’s not difficult to see why, either. In his 40 plate appearances within the split this season, Meidroth is slashing .314/.385/.457 with a 136 wRC+.
Obviously Ozuna’s overall numbers look gross. There’s no polite way to put it. The veteran slugger couldn’t buy a hit early on in the season, and it’s going to take him a while to dig himself out of that hole. That said, things haven’t been so bad lately. Going back to April 14, Ozuna has managed a .191 ISO and a 113 wRC+. In 73 plate appearances, he’s mustered seven extra-base hits with a 29.2% line drive rate. There’s still a useful hitter in this 35-year-old body.
He’s also still at his most useful in opposite-hand matchups. Matchups like he’ll draw tonight in the form of Eduardo Rodriguez ($7,400). The man they call E-Rod had a surprising amount of success to begin the season, but that’s all now faded away. Over his past four starts, the southpaw has pitched to a 6.19 FIP with nearly as many walks (13) as strikeouts (14). It’s also a span where Rodriguez is surrendering 1.74 opponent home runs per nine. Woof.
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