RotoWire Staff Picks: Hitter Busts

RotoWire Staff Picks: Hitter Busts

Over the weekend, I asked the RotoWire staff for their favorite sleepers and busts for this season. On Monday, I shared the group's top hitter sleepers, and on Tuesday, I shared our top pitcher sleepers. Today, we're onto bust hitters, and for the first time, we have two of my colleagues landing on the same player.

The players are listed in order of their ADP in the RotoWire Online Championship. I've included each writer's explanation for their pick from their response to my email, or in some cases, I've used excerpts of articles they've written this offseason.

Intro by Erik Halterman

Fantasy Baseball Busts: Hitters

Fernando Tatis Jr., OF, Padres (ADP 11)

His two seasons since his PED suspension haven't been commensurate with a first-round draft pick, as he's failed to have an OPS over .832. His ISO was .329 in his spectacular 2021 season, but he's had just a .192 and .216 ISO since. Not that those are bad, but expecting 30-plus homers again may be a stretch. — Peter Schoenke

Ronald Acuna Jr., OF, Braves (ADP 32)

I truly hope I'm wrong, and it's worth noting that Acuna's ADP in NFBC leagues has fallen back by about five picks so far in March versus January and February. Still, I just can't approve of using a top-35 pick on a guy I know is going to miss at least five or six weeks and who has said he won't do as much running this season. Acuna wasn't

Over the weekend, I asked the RotoWire staff for their favorite sleepers and busts for this season. On Monday, I shared the group's top hitter sleepers, and on Tuesday, I shared our top pitcher sleepers. Today, we're onto bust hitters, and for the first time, we have two of my colleagues landing on the same player.

The players are listed in order of their ADP in the RotoWire Online Championship. I've included each writer's explanation for their pick from their response to my email, or in some cases, I've used excerpts of articles they've written this offseason.

Intro by Erik Halterman

Fantasy Baseball Busts: Hitters

Fernando Tatis Jr., OF, Padres (ADP 11)

His two seasons since his PED suspension haven't been commensurate with a first-round draft pick, as he's failed to have an OPS over .832. His ISO was .329 in his spectacular 2021 season, but he's had just a .192 and .216 ISO since. Not that those are bad, but expecting 30-plus homers again may be a stretch. — Peter Schoenke

Ronald Acuna Jr., OF, Braves (ADP 32)

I truly hope I'm wrong, and it's worth noting that Acuna's ADP in NFBC leagues has fallen back by about five picks so far in March versus January and February. Still, I just can't approve of using a top-35 pick on a guy I know is going to miss at least five or six weeks and who has said he won't do as much running this season. Acuna wasn't the same player immediately after his first ACL surgery, and while Atlanta is taking a more deliberate pace with him this time around, my expectations are lowered. — Ryan Boyer

Yainer Diaz, C, Astros (ADP 58)

For a catcher to go this early in drafts, he needs a path to get himself into the lineup virtually every game. William Contreras, Adley Rutschman and Salvador Perez can start frequently at designated hitter, while Willson Contreras will be the Cardinals' everyday first baseman. But while Diaz started 36 times at DH last season, Houston's plan this year is for Yordan Alvarez to spend very little time in the field, so Diaz won't get the at-bats necessary to be an elite fantasy catcher unless Alvarez misses an extended period. — Erik Halterman

Marcell Ozuna, UT, Braves (ADP 66)

He likely won't play in all 162 games again, for starters. The 34-year-old designated hitter with no speed and limited athleticism probably won't have a .359 BABIP again, either. — Chris Morgan

Kyle Schwarber, UT, Phillies (ADP 72)

Everyone's favorite power hitter who offers very little else continues to make fantasy owners pay for the longballs. His batting average drops below the Mendoza line, and his poor play in the field virtually limits him to DHing. — Brad Johnson

Luis Robert, OF, White Sox (ADP 79)

It's tough to invest a top-100 pick on someone who has averaged 399 plate appearances per season over the past four years. — Ryan Rufe

He has the talent to pay off a seventh-round pick (his ADP drops to 91 in the Main Event) and obviously a trade is probable if he's healthy this summer, but Robert's average, on-base percentage and hard-hit rate have declined in three straight years while his strikeout rate has taken a big jump in each of the past two years. Plus, he averages just over 100 games per season. Give me Seiya Suzuki, Bryan Reynolds or Riley Greene, who all go later. — James Anderson

Mark Vientos, 3B, Mets (ADP 99)

Vientos broke out with 27 homers last season, but that will be tough to duplicate. He never surpassed that total in any season in the minors, posting a .205 average and .610 OPS in his first two years at this level. That, paired with the fact that he had no steals last year, makes Vientos a tough sell for fantasy purposes in the middle rounds. — Joel Bartilotta

Pete Crow-Armstrong, OF, Cubs (ADP 133)

I almost envision folks looking at PCA and thinking back to this time last season when Jarren Duran had an ADP of 161, hoping to strike gold twice with what are perceived to be similar skillsets. So, let's compare 2023 Duran against 2024 PCA by StatCast percentile rankings to see how well this comparison holds up:

STAT

PCA 2024

DURAN 2023

xBA

13th

77th

xwOBA

11th

47th

HardHit%

30th

77th

Chase%

2nd

38th

Whiff%

18th

53rd

K%

36th

30th

BB%

11th

26th

Sprint Speed

99th

96th

Baserunning

98th

97th

Yes, both players can fly in the field and on the basepaths, but the rest of the comparison simply doesn't hold up on paper. Jason Collette, excerpted from "Collette Calls: 2025 NL Central Bold Predictions"

Want to Read More?
Subscribe to RotoWire to see the full article.

We reserve some of our best content for our paid subscribers. Plus, if you choose to subscribe you can discuss this article with the author and the rest of the RotoWire community.

Get Instant Access To This Article Get Access To This Article
RotoWire Community
Join Our Subscriber-Only MLB Chat
Chat with our writers and other RotoWire MLB fans for all the pre-game info and in-game banter.
Join The Discussion
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
James Anderson
James Anderson is RotoWire's Lead Prospect Analyst, Assistant Baseball Editor, and co-host of Farm Fridays on Sirius/XM radio and the RotoWire Prospect Podcast.
Joel Bartilotta
Joel has 20 years of Fantasy experience, and can recall riding a young Daunte Culpepper to a championship in the 2003-04 season in his inaugural fantasy year. He covers NBA, NFL, daily fantasy, EPL, and MLB for RotoWire.
Ryan Boyer
Ryan has been writing about fantasy baseball since 2005 for Fanball, Rotoworld, Baseball Prospectus and RotoWire.
Jason Collette
Jason has been helping fantasy owners since 1999, and here at Rotowire since 2011. You can hear Jason weekly on many of the Sirius/XM Fantasy channel offerings throughout the season as well as on the Sleeper and the Bust podcast every Sunday. A ten-time FSWA finalist, Jason won the FSWA's Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year award in 2013 and the Baseball Series of the Year award in 2018 for Collette Calls,and was the 2023 AL LABR champion. Jason manages his social media presence at https://linktr.ee/jasoncollette
Erik Halterman
Erik Halterman is the Features Editor for RotoWire. He is one of the hosts of the RotoWire Fantasy Baseball Podcast as well as RotoWire Fantasy Baseball on MLB Network Radio and RotoWire Fantasy Sports Today on Fantasy Sports Radio, both on SiriusXM.
Brad Johnson
For more than 30 years, pitching guru Brad "Bogfella" Johnson has provided insightful evaluation and analysis of pitchers to a wide variety of fantasy baseball websites, webcasts and radio broadcasts. He joined RotoWire in 2011 with his popular Bogfella's Notebook.
Chris Morgan
Chris Morgan is a writer of sports, pop culture, and humor articles, a book author, a podcaster, and a fan of all Detroit sports teams.
Ryan Rufe
Ryan manages the MLB Closer Grid and authors 'Closer Encounters'. He also contributes to the MLB draft kit and has been helping RotoWire subscribers through our 'Ask An Expert' feature since 2014. He's an NFBC veteran with 2 top-15 overall finishes (2018, 2024) in the RotoWire Online Championship.
Peter Schoenke
Peter Schoenke is the president and co-founder of RotoWire.com. He's been elected to the hall of fame for both the Fantasy Sports Trade Association and Fantasy Sports Writers Association and also won the Best Fantasy Baseball Article on the Internet in 2005 from the FSWA. He roots for for the Minnesota Twins, Vikings and T-Wolves.
College Baseball Futures Wednesday: College World Series Longshots
College Baseball Futures Wednesday: College World Series Longshots
Ranking the Most Home Run-Friendly MLB Ballparks (2020-2024)
Ranking the Most Home Run-Friendly MLB Ballparks (2020-2024)
RotoWire Staff Picks: Pitcher Sleepers
RotoWire Staff Picks: Pitcher Sleepers
Dodgers vs Cubs MLB Picks for Tokyo Series Game 2
Dodgers vs Cubs MLB Picks for Tokyo Series Game 2