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Today — 11 March 2026Main stream

2026 Fantasy Baseball Park Factors: Ranking the best (and worst) MLB stadiums by pitching boosts

After looking at ballpark effects on hitters on Tuesday, we will turn our attention to hurlers. Overall, the impact on pitchers will be the exact opposite as the impact on hitters. For example, if Coors Field is a hitter’s paradise, it’s also a death blow to the fantasy baseball value of any pitcher. But there is more nuance in some circumstances.

For example, strikeout tendencies by ballpark matter more for pitchers, as those totals are more directly tied to their fantasy production. And although home run tendencies matter greatly for hitters, the impact on pitchers is more closely tied to pure run production, unless the pitcher is especially prone to allowing homers.

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Here are some ballpark tendencies from 2025 that fantasy managers will want to know before drafting and setting their lineups.

Best Overall Park Factors (2025)

Worst Overall Park Factors (2025)

T-Mobile Park (SEA) 91

Coors Field (COL) 115

Globe Life Field (TEX) 91

Sutter Health Park (ATH) 108

Progressive Field (CLE) 95

Comerica Park (DET) 105

Petco Park (SD) 95

Dodger Stadium (LAD) 104

PNC Park (PIT) 96

Oriole Park at Camden Yards (BAL) 103

Kauffman Stadium (KC) 97

Fenway Park (BOS) 103

loanDepot park (MIA) 97

Rogers Centre (TOR) 103

Daikin Park (HOU) 97

 

Busch Stadium (STL) 97

 

Classic Pitchers Parks

T-Mobile Park

Although the Mariners have several pitchers who are coveted in fantasy circles, it’s fair to wonder if their home park embellishes their true talent. After all, last season Seattle hurlers produced a 3.28 ERA and a 1.09 WHIP at home, in comparison to a 4.50 ERA and a 1.35 WHIP on the road. That’s the difference between being the baseball pitching staff in baseball and a bottom-10 group. Fortunately, fantasy managers can bake in the T-Mobile advantage to the long-time Seattle starters who remain with the team this year.

Globe Life Field

Life is tough for hitters in the AL West, as Globe Life Field has quickly separated from the pack to join T-Mobile in their own tier of offense-suppressers. In fact, Globe Life could be the worst park for hitters, as it is not only tied with T-Mobile in overall park factor, but it ranked 28th (ahead of Busch Stadium and PNC Park) in terms of producing home runs.

Although the durability of Jacob deGrom and Nathan Eovaldi remains in question, they are both likely to be excellent on a per-game basis. And MacKenzie Gore has a good chance for a breakout season now that he has been moved from the Nats to the Rangers. Finally, although Jack Leiter has not yet shown exciting skills, he is still a former notable prospect who will continue to benefit from his home venue.

The best of the rest

The next tier of pitcher-friendly parks includes several venues that are well-known for aiding hurlers, including Petco Park (Padres), PNC Park (Pirates), Busch Stadium (Cardinals), Kauffman Stadium (Royals), loanDepot park (Marlins) and Daikin Park (Astros).

Hitter-friendly parks

Coors Field

There is no need to spend significant time reminding everyone that Coors Field remains undefeated in terrorizing pitchers. The Rockies rarely produce a viable fantasy pitching option, and most opposing pitchers should be benched in Coors Field. Colorado’s deep rebuild and lackluster roster are the only reasons to be a little more liberal with road starters at Coors, especially early in the season when the weather remains cold.

Sutter Health Park

Luis Severino has been vocal about his dislike for the Athletics temporary home. He likely isn’t the only one, as the Athletics logged a 4.96 ERA at home and a 4.42 mark on the road last season. The team has a few pitchers who could be sleepers this season, especially Jacob Lopez and Luis Morales. Unfortunately, the hitter-friendly nature of their home venue makes them less appealing in the final rounds of drafts.

The best of the rest

Comerica Park (Tigers) played surprisingly well for hitters last season, not that Tarik Skubal noticed. It is part of the second tier of hitter-friendly parks, along with Dodger Stadium (Dodgers), Oriole Park at Camden Yards (Orioles), Rogers Centre (Blue Jays) and Fenway Park (Red Sox).

Strikeout superiority

Some fans may not be aware that, in addition to having an impact on batted balls, some parks have qualities that lead to more or fewer strikeouts. Here are the parks at each end of the spectrum.

Best Strikeout Park Factors (2025)

Worst Strikeout Park Factors (2025)

T-Mobile Park (SEA) 113

Coors Field (COL) 89

Daikin Park (HOU) 110

Busch Stadium (STL) 90

Citizens Bank Park (PHI) 107

Kauffman Stadium (KC) 91

Angel Stadium (LAA) 106

Chase Field (ARI) 92

American Family Field (MIL) 106

Fenway Park (BOS) 93

Progressive Field (CLE) 106

Rogers Centre (TOR) 94

T-Mobile Park

Not only does Seattle’s venue suppress scoring, but it also helps with strikeouts to a greater degree than any other venue. The ridiculous benefits of this park is a good reason to choose Logan Gilbert or Bryan Woo from the second tier of aces.

Daikin Park

The park formerly known as Minute Maid is the second-best venue for racking up whiffs. Unfortunately, beyond Hunter Brown, Houston lacks starters who are known for their swing-and-miss abilities. Still, Daikin Park could help newcomer Tatsuya Imai and offseason addition Mike Burrows exceed expectations.

The best of the rest

The second tier of strikeout stadiums includes Citizens Bank Park (Phillies), Angel Stadium (Angels), American Family Field (Brewers) and Progressive Field (Guardians). This would normally be the part where I mention starting pitchers who joined these teams in the offseason, but unfortunately, these four clubs failed to invest heavily in the offseason pitching market.

Strikeout suppressers

Coors Field

Is there any part of pitching that this park doesn’t ruin? The answer is no.

Busch Stadium

The venue in St. Louis is a polarizing one, as it limits scoring but also limits strikeouts. To make the problem even worse, the Cardinals have several starters who already struggle to put batters away. The ceiling is incredibly low for Matthew Liberatore, Dustin May and Michael McGreevy.

Kauffman Stadium

Although Cole Ragans is unfazed by the tendencies of his home park, the rest of the Royals rotation lacks the swing-and-miss ability to overcome this venue. That list includes Michael Wacha, Kris Bubic, Seth Lugo and Noah Cameron.

The worst of the rest

The next tier of venues that reduce strikeout totals includes Chase Field (Diamondbacks), Fenway Park (Red Sox) and Rogers Centre (Blue Jays). The Blue Jays added two notable pitchers (Dylan Cease, Cody Ponce), as did the Red Sox (Sonny Gray, Ranger Suárez). Fantasy managers may wish to knock a few whiffs off their projections.

Before yesterdayMain stream

Fantasy Baseball: Fred's Fades — players to avoid at their Yahoo ADP

I’m an optimistic person who generally avoids dwelling on the negative. But there are times when I need to use my critical eye, and this is one of them. I’d like to introduce you to Fred’s Fades — the list of players whom I will avoid in my 2026 drafts.

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While nearly every player makes sense at some point in the draft, these players will not be anywhere near the top of my list when we reach their ADP. And while some of my fades stem from personal preference, others are backed by data from Yahoo Fantasy Plus. Choices by round are based on 10-team leagues.

Round 1: José Ramírez, 3B, Cleveland Guardians

This pick has nothing to do with Ramírez’s skill set and everything to do with my distrust of the Guardians offense. After the front office failed to seek outside help for a group that finished 28th in runs scored last season, I don’t see enough talent in the incumbents to expect a notable improvement. I would rather draft a hitter from a more productive lineup, such as Elly De La Cruz, Julio Rodríguez or Kyle Tucker.

Round 2: Corbin Carroll, OF, Arizona Diamondbacks

Although Carroll has fallen in drafts since undergoing surgery to repair a broken hamate bone, he still needs to fall a little further. There is no need to take a risk on an injured player when players such as Pete Alonso and Nick Kurtz are still on the board. And although a healthy Carroll is an excellent fantasy asset, the career .258 hitter isn’t a difference-maker in the batting average and RBI categories.

Round 3: Ketel Marte, 2B, Arizona Diamondbacks

Although Marte is an excellent player, he tends to miss time every year. In fact, the 32-year-old has appeared in 140 games in just one of the past five seasons. Missing a few contests inevitably takes a toll on his counting stats, which he cannot afford given that he rarely steals bases. Marte could also be hampered this year by the fact that the D-backs lineup no longer resembles the one that led the majors in runs two years ago.

Round 4: Mookie Betts, SS, Los Angeles Dodgers

This one pains me, as I enjoy watching Betts, who has been one of baseball’s best players over the past decade. But I’m not sure that the 33-year-old will have the category juice to justify his ADP, even if he bounces back to some degree from a down year. He hasn’t posted an impactful steals total since 2018 and has totaled 39 homers in 266 games over the past two years.

Round 5: Max Fried, SP, New York Yankees

I’m out on a bit of a limb here, as Fried is well-liked around the fantasy industry. I see him as someone with a mediocre ceiling, thanks to his good-but-not-great strikeout skills. I could say the same thing about Logan Webb, who has a similar ADP, but Webb improved his whiff rate last season and tends to make up for his lack of per-inning strikeouts by being baseball’s best workhorse.

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While it’s the ceiling that primarily drives me away, Yahoo Fantasy Plus data shows that Fried has a lower floor than some managers believe. In fact, his floor is the sixth lowest among starters (295.8 points) with a top 100 ADP.

Round 6: Josh Naylor, 1B, Seattle Mariners

I can’t do it. I can’t pretend that Naylor has enough speed to swipe 15 bases, let alone 30. I also can’t pretend that I feel good about his first full season in pitcher-friendly T-Mobile Park. Naylor thrived in a limited sample with the Mariners down the stretch, but it wasn’t enough to override my concerns.

Round 7: Austin Riley, 3B, Atlanta Braves

I covet several players in the Rd. 7 cohort, which means that I won’t draft Riley this year. I believe that the 28-year-old can get his career back on track in 2026, but there is still plenty of reason for hesitation, given that he has hit .258 with 35 homers, 110 RBI and 117 runs over 212 games in the past two seasons.

Round 8: Alex Bregman, 3B, Chicago Cubs

I’m well-aware of the weakness of the third base position this season, which has me on the lookout for any hot corner options with a solid ADP. Unfortunately, Bregman is overvalued. Going from Fenway Park to Wrigley Field is a major downgrade. Bregman has amassed a total of nine steals over the past six seasons, owns an unremarkable .263 average since 2020 and last hit more than 26 homers in 2019.

Round 9: Oneil Cruz, OF, Pittsburgh Pirates

Although Cruz strikes the ball as hard as virtually anyone, he doesn’t strike it often enough to be an effective hitter. The lanky slugger struck out 32.0% of the time last season, which contributed to a lowly .200 average and .676 OPS. His swing-and-miss tendencies were nothing new, and the same can be said of his struggles against southpaws. Cruz hit .102 with a .400 OPS against lefties, and the Pirates will soon be forced to turn him into a platoon player.

Yahoo Fantasy Plus assigns Cruz the third-lowest floor (595.5 points) among players with a top 100 ADP, which supports my stance that he is best left for a different manager.

Round 10: Salvador Pérez, C/1B, Kansas City Royals

The main reason that I won’t draft Pérez is that the catcher position is loaded with appealing late-round options. The other reason is age — Pérez will turn 36 in May, and I don’t feel the need to draft an aging catcher when there are so many options at the position. Pérez will be helpful in homers and RBI, but he doesn’t score many runs, and he posted a batting average above .255 in just one of the past four seasons. My opinion on Pérez is backed by Yahoo Fantasy Plus data, which shows him as having the lowest floor of anyone (629.6 points) being drafted in his ADP range.

Round 11: Tyler Glasnow, SP, Los Angeles Dodgers

I could have listed Pablo López, who is out for the season. But anyone who is drafting López isn’t putting much effort into their draft. Instead, I’ll list Glasnow, who has thrown 100 innings just three times in his 10-year career and has a career-high of 134 innings. It seems foolish to project him for more than 120 innings, and I would much rather take a chance on a high-upside youngster, such as Jacob Misiorowski or Trey Yesavage.

Round 12: Agustín Ramírez, C, Miami Marlins

I’m not sure that Ramírez can last a full season as a lineup regular. His defensive skills are subpar, which is a big deal at such an important position. In fact, prospect Joe Mack may already be better suited to handle Miami’s pitching staff. If Ramírez were to move off the catcher position, he would immediately become an offensive liability unless he improves on the .701 OPS from his rookie year. Given that he fared worse as the season went on (.637 OPS in the second half), a year-two surge seems unlikely.

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