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Friday’s hitter-prop board begins in the places where an inning can outgrow the first mistake. Great American Ball Park puts JJ Bleday’s newly amplified contact and Austin Riley’s still-dangerous middle-order swing inside the same warm-air pressure chamber, with traffic likely to arrive before either hitter steps in. Coors Field gives Rafael Devers the loudest scoring canvas of the night against Michael Lorenzen, whose season has made every elevated ball feel like an emergency. Julio Rodríguez closes the card in a quieter park with a sharper premise: Zac Gallen has allowed firm contact often enough for Seattle’s centerpiece to matter twice, through his own extra-base force and through the runs or RBI that can gather around it. These are hitters placed at the hinge of an inning—lift in the bat, runners in reach and opposing pitchers leaving too much of the game available to one hard turn.
Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out props and predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.
JJ Bleday has become the sort of prop bat worth discovering before the surface line grows too expensive. He enters Friday with seven HR in a compressed Cincinnati sample, while the deeper shape has become much louder: a 91.1 mph average exit velocity, 48.6% hard-hit rate, 13.7% barrel rate, .419 wOBA and .411 xwOBA. His sweet-spot contact has surged well beyond last season’s mark, and that matters more than simply noting that a few balls have already left the yard. Bleday is now striking elevated contact with enough force to turn a good hitting park into an event multiplier. Projected batting third behind Blake Dunn and Elly De La Cruz, he can reach two combined hits, runs and RBI through several clean routes: a run-scoring extra-base hit, a single followed by Sal Stewart and Eugenio Suárez, or one pulled fly ball into Great American Ball Park’s right-field reward. Grant Holmes enters with a 3.78 ERA while allowing a 44.4% hard-hit rate and 9.3% barrels, and Cincinnati is playing in 78-degree weather with a nine-run total. Bleday is an HRR target because his contact renovation now intersects with lineup traffic and park geometry.
Austin Riley arrives as the card’s buy-low middle-order bat, carrying a season line that has muted his price without removing the underlying damage route. He is batting .216 with a .288 OBP and .376 SLG through 57 games, yet he still has eight HR, 31 RBI and 28 runs, with his better contact supported by a 91.0 mph average exit velocity, 45.8% hard-hit rate and a barrel rate around 10%. The present version of Riley has produced unevenly; Friday gives him an unusually favorable place to convert one firm swing into multiple categories. Chris Paddack brings an 0-6 record and 6.86 ERA into Great American Ball Park, where warm air and short power alleys enlarge the value of Atlanta’s relentless lineup depth. Riley is projected batting sixth, a slot that trims a plate-appearance edge while setting an RBI table behind Ronald Acuña Jr., Michael Harris II, Matt Olson and Ozzie Albies. A double with two runners aboard ends the discussion; a hard RBI single followed by lower-order continuation can also clear two HRR. This selection reads the inning ahead of the box score: Paddack must navigate five dangerous Braves before reaching a proven power bat whose price has softened during a quiet opening third.
Rafael Devers receives the slate’s most generous scoring architecture: a cleanup assignment at Coors Field behind Willy Adames, Luis Arraez and Casey Schmitt against a starter carrying a 7.21 ERA and 1.90 WHIP. Devers’ season has been quieter than his reputation—.242/.286/.409 with seven HR, 15 doubles, 28 RBI and 21 runs through 56 games—and his current 45.8% hard-hit rate and 8.5% barrel rate sit below his most violent seasons. The prop market gives that context the correct shape. Three HRR allows Denver to elevate every productive version of Devers: an RBI double into the spacious gaps with Arraez or Schmitt aboard, two run-producing singles during an extended inning, or the familiar one-swing eruption. Michael Lorenzen has been unable to keep damage contained, and this matchup is carrying a 10.5 total with temperatures projected in the mid-70s at first pitch. Coors does more than help homers; it turns line drives into doubles, doubles into two-run sequences and routine traffic into extra plate appearances. Devers is positioned at the hinge of the Giants’ projected order, directly after the on-base and barrel threats. At even money, the wager captures his veteran impact bat inside the widest offensive window of Friday night.
Julio Rodríguez is the slate’s cleanest total-bases selection because his present production and Zac Gallen’s current contact slippage meet at the correct threshold. Rodríguez enters with a .258/.317/.437 slash line, 10 HR, 11 doubles, 30 runs and 27 RBI in 57 games. Those numbers describe a hitter creating extra-base outcomes with regularity even as his homer profile has stopped demanding a shorter, less forgiving price. Projected batting second, Rodríguez should receive four or five plate appearances in front of Josh Naylor, Randy Arozarena and Luke Raley. Gallen remains a name capable of discouraging casual attacks, although his 2026 performance has invited a different evaluation: a 3-4 record, 4.80 ERA, .346 xwOBA allowed, 90.7 mph average exit velocity allowed and 44.8% hard-hit rate allowed. Seattle’s game total sits at seven inside T-Mobile Park, making a run-creation prop dependent on teammates a narrower proposition. Total bases stays attached to Rodríguez’s own barrel and gap power. One driven ball past an outfielder, two clean singles or the home run all clear the number. At +132, this wager catches a star in a favorable individual contact matchup while refusing to demand that the entire Seattle offense become explosive around him.
Julio bags a second entry on the card because Zac Gallen’s current version is giving Seattle’s most dangerous athlete several routes into a productive night. Rodríguez enters with a .258/.317/.437 slash line, 10 HR, 11 doubles, 30 runs and 27 RBI, backed by a .334 xwOBA and a 90.2 mph average exit velocity. His barrel rate has cooled to 7.9%, a detail that steers the wager away from asking for a home run and toward the broader 2+ HRR threshold. Gallen has lost some of the clean contact suppression that built his reputation: he brings a 4.80 ERA, .346 xwOBA allowed, 90.7 mph average exit velocity allowed and 44.8% hard-hit rate allowed into T-Mobile Park. Rodríguez, expected near the top of Seattle’s order, can cash this through his own work or the inning around him: two hits, an RBI double, a single followed by a run, or the over-the-wall event still available inside his power ceiling. The Mariners do not require a runaway scoring night for their star center fielder to produce two offensive events. Gallen’s loosened contact profile gives Rodríguez enough room to turn premium plate appearances into a second clean plus for the card.
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