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Sunday, 3 May 2026

Quiambao now has back-to-back 5150 triumphs

Bea Quiambao confirmed her status as the country’s rising star in endurance racing after winning Camiguin Island’s first-ever Ironman 5150 hosting on Sunday over a field loaded by seasoned local and international campaigners. The 25-year-old native of Bukidnon won every leg of the 1.5-kilometer swim, 40-km bike and 10-km run in two hours, 44 minutes

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Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Pickups by Category (Week 6)

We’re far enough into the season now that standings are starting to take shape, and category needs are becoming clearer. Whether you’re chasing batting average, hunting saves or trying to claw back into steals, there are still plenty of impact players sitting on waiver wires who can help immediately and, hopefully, in the long term. Read on for this week’s priority fantasy baseball waiver wire pickups for each major category.

Fantasy Baseball In-Season Waiver Wire & Trade Advice

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Pickups by Category

While most of these players will contribute across multiple categories, their primary value comes from the one they’re listed under. I also rarely repeat players from week to week, so it’s not a bad idea to read previous articles to see if any of those players are still available.

All players listed are rostered in fewer than 55% of Yahoo leagues.

Batting Average

Brandon Marsh (OF – PHI): 15%

The Phillies’ lineup as a whole hasn’t quite clicked yet, but Brandon Marsh has been one of the few bright spots. After finishing last season with a strong .280 batting average, Marsh has taken another step forward, hitting .304 through the first stretch of the season.

What’s encouraging isn’t just the surface-level average; it’s how he’s getting there. Marsh continues to limit weak contact and has done a better job staying within himself at the plate, using the whole field rather than selling out for power.

Marsh’s contact profile supports a high batting average on balls in play (BABIP), and while .300+ may be aggressive to project all season, there’s a legitimate reason to believe he can settle in as a .280-.290 hitter.

If you’re trying to stabilize your batting average without sacrificing counting stats, Marsh is a strong plug-and-play option who won’t hurt you elsewhere.

RBI

Nathaniel Lowe (1B – CIN): 7%

Eugenio Suarez‘s injury opened up a spot for Nathaniel Lowe to garner starts, and he’s arguably been the better hitter. Since joining the starting lineup on April 22nd, Lowe has blasted five home runs, scored eight times and driven in 10 runs. He’s also registered a .333 average during the nine-game span.

In my mind, Lowe should have been in the starting lineup immediately against righties while Ke’Bryan Hayes should have hit the bench, but that’s a separate topic for a different day.

Lowe consistently posts strong contact rates and works deep counts, which allows him to capitalize on run-scoring opportunities. Hitting in the heart of the order gives him steady volume, and his gap-to-gap power plays perfectly in RBI situations.

If your roster is light on run production or you’re stuck in the middle of the pack in RBI, Lowe is the type of steady bat who can quietly move you up the standings.

Runs

Travis Bazzana (2B – CLE): 31%

Travis Bazzana profiles as exactly the type of player you want if you’re chasing runs. He’s an on-base machine who consistently puts himself in scoring position, and that skill set translates directly to fantasy value.

Bazzana’s advanced plate discipline allows him to draw walks while maintaining a solid batting average, giving him a strong on-base percentage (OBP). Pair that with his ability to swipe a few bags, and you’ve got a player who is constantly putting pressure on opposing defenses.

In OBP formats, Bazzana’s value jumps even higher. But even in standard leagues, players who get on base at this clip and have the speed to capitalize tend to pile up runs in a hurry. He also qualifies at one of the toughest positions to fill. If you need a boost in runs without sacrificing other categories, Bazzana is a fine target.

Home Runs

Jac Caglianone (OF – KCR): 52%

After a slow start, Jac Caglianone is beginning to take flight. The Royals’ young slugger has launched three home runs over his last eight starts, showing signs that his power is starting to translate in the Majors.

Caglianone’s raw power has never been in question. The key was whether he could make enough consistent contact to access it in games. Recently, he’s done a better job of getting into hitters’ counts and elevating the ball, which hopefully he continues to do.

Power often comes in bunches, and Caglianone looks like the type who could go on a serious home barrage once he’s locked in. Everyone remembers what he did in college.

If you’re looking to add upside in the power department, now is the time to act before Caglianone’s breakout fully happens.

Stolen Bases

Nasim Nunez (2B, SS – WSH): 8%

Although I was singing Nasim Nunez’s praises all offseason, I have to mention him again here. The market has shifted a bit this year, with “one-trick” speed players being slightly devalued, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t incredibly useful in the right build. If your roster is lacking steals, there may not be a more direct fix than Nunez.

Nunez’s role and skill set are tailor-made for swiping bags. Even without offering much power, his speed alone can swing the category in a matter of weeks. In roto formats, especially, adding a player like Nunez can be the difference between finishing near the bottom in steals or climbing several points in the standings.

If you need steals, don’t overthink it. Nunez is one of the clearest category specialists available.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Assistant Analyze Moves Who To Pick Up

ERA

Nick Martinez (SP, RP – TBR): 34%

Nick Martinez isn’t going to light up radar guns or rack up elite strikeout totals, but he’s exactly the type of pitcher who can help stabilize your ERA.

Martinez relies on command, pitch mix and weak contact rather than overpowering hitters. That approach can be incredibly valuable, and it seems to be working.

Martinez has been incredibly consistent so far, producing a 1.45 ERA and 1.00 WHIP. He does a great job of limiting hard contact and keeping hitters off balance, enabling him to navigate lineups efficiently. If you’re protecting a strong ERA or trying to recover from a few rough starts (Rhett Lowder, anyone?), Martinez is a solid option to help steady the ship.

WHIP

Jake Bennett (SP – BOS): 12%

Jake Bennett’s calling card is his control. He pounds the corners of the zone and doesn’t give hitters many free passes. He also does an excellent job avoiding big innings by staying ahead in counts.

Bennet registered a minuscule 0.71 WHIP over five starts in Triple-A this season with an ERA below 1.00. The 6-foot-6 southpaw continued to limit bats in his Major League debut, holding the Astros to just one run over five innings while earning the victory.

Pitchers who consistently limit baserunners are incredibly valuable, especially in deeper leagues where ratios can swing quickly. Bennett may not be flashy, but he’s effective. Target the Red Sox’s newest arm for those in search of lowering both WHIP and ERA.

Strikeouts

Cade Cavalli (SP – WSH): 15%

Cade Cavalli looks like he’s starting to put it all together. The former top prospect struck out 10 batters in each of his last two starts, flashing the swing-and-miss stuff that made him such a highly regarded arm.

When Cavalli is right, the big righty can overwhelm hitters. His fastball has some nice spin and velocity, but it was getting clobbered in his first few games of the season. Since then, Cavalli has turned more to his breaking stuff, and it has done wonders.

Cavalli’s sweeper, change-up and curveball mix have rendered just eight singles and one double. He’s racked up 21 punchouts using those pitches and has kept the exit velocities around 84 miles per hour (MPH) — well below league average.

Strikeouts can be one of the easiest categories to gain ground in, and adding a pitcher with this type of upside can make a significant impact. If you’re chasing strikeouts, Cavalli is one of the better options you’ll find in deeper leagues.

Wins

JR Ritchie (SP – ATH): 31%

Wins are often unpredictable, but putting yourself in a position to earn them is half the battle, and JR Ritchie checks that box.

Pitching with strong offensive support and a reliable bullpen behind him increases his chances of converting solid outings into wins. The Braves’ system has consistently produced pitchers who can work efficiently and keep their team in games, and Ritchie fits that mold.

The Braves’ top pitching prospect produced an ERA below 1.00 in the minor leagues this season, and he should stick around even after Spencer Strider is activated. Ritchie’s upside alone makes him a must-add waiver wire pickup in most leagues.

Saves

Jack Perkins (SP, RP – ATH): 25%

After a few rough outings, Joel Kuhnel‘s stint in the closer role for the Athletics appears to have been short-lived, opening the door for Jack Perkins. Perkins has the arsenal to succeed in the ninth inning. More importantly, he’s now being trusted in those opportunities.

The closer role is often a revolving door, but Perkins looks like he could stay a while. He throws 97 MPH, he’s snagged three saves and has a strikeout rate above 30%. The A’s are winning games, and Perkins could snag you a handful of saves with a lighter schedule coming up.

Fantasy Baseball Trade & Waiver Wire Advice


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Saturday, 2 May 2026

Heart beats strong in Candon, with a little help from friends

CANDON CITY—At its core, the PVL All-Star Game was supposed to be a night where its stars put their talent on show for nothing but pure fun. Late Friday night here, the league’s stars decided to share some of the Candon Arena spotlight with people behind the scenes, from court assistants to line judges—and everyone

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Ildemaro Vargas sees hit streak end as Diamondbacks fall to Cubs

Diamondbacks infielder Ildemaro Vargas’ hitting streak came to an end at 27 games when he was shut out in Arizona’s 2-0 loss to the Chicago Cubs on Saturday.

The infielder extended his streak long enough to set a new best mark by a Venezuelan-born player in MLB history. It went down as the second longest in franchise history, trailing only Luis Gonzalez’s 30-game streak.

Vargas was batting in the cleanup spot for the first time in his career on Saturday. He was 16 of his last 33 entering the contest, coming off a 4-for-4 showing in Friday’s loss.

In his first at-bat, Vargas grounded out with Corbin Carroll in scoring position. He later flied out to deep center field and grounded out his third and fourth times up.

His batting average dropped from a Major League-leading .404 before the game to .388 after coming up empty on his four at-bats.

Ryne Nelson bounces back

Coming off 14 earned runs over his last two starts, Ryne Nelson got off to a much better start on Saturday with two strikeouts in the first inning.

Cubs left fielder Ian Happ was a thorn in Nelson’s side throughout the start after a solo home run in the second inning, later adding a double. He was also intentionally walked to load the bases ahead of a Seiya Suzuki flyout.

Outside of Happ’s damages, Nelson did not allow a run with two hits and one walk in 5.2 innings pitched.

Chicago southpaw Shota Imanaga was even better, pitching seven scoreless innings (84 pitches) with four hits and one walk allowed.

The Cubs’ second run was also scored by Happ, following his triple and Suzuki’s sacrifice fly to left field in the eighth inning.

Arizona has lost three straight three-game series with a two-game split in Mexico over that span for a 3-8 record over its last 11 games. It was 10-3 over the previous 13 games.

The Diamondbacks can finish the six-game road trip (1-4 so far) on a good note with Sunday’s series finale at the Cubs. The matchup will see Merrill Kelly face off against lefty Matthew Boyd.

Catch first pitch at 11:20 a.m. MST on 98.7, the Arizona Sports app or online.



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Friday, 1 May 2026

Team Power owns first-ever Spikers’ Turf All-Star victory

CANDON—Sydney Calderon, from Spikers’ Turf Open Conference runner-up Savouge, was thrilled to win the Volleyball All-Star Showcase with Team Power that was bannered by the core of the very team that frustrated her side just this past month in a gripping three-game finale. “After our loss to Criss Cross, we told each other: ‘let’s win

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2026 Fantasy WNBA Rankings & Sleepers

2026 Fantasy WNBA Rankings & Sleepers

★ Fantasy Analysis

2026 WNBA Fantasy Top Rankings

Season projections powered by FantasyPros WNBA Betting Model v10 – ESPN scoring format

Updated for 2026 Season
ESPN Standard Scoring
73 Players Ranked

⚙ ESPN Scoring System

1 pt per PTS
1.5 pts per 3PM
1.2 pts per REB
1.2 pts per AST
2 pts per STL
2 pts per BLK

⭐ Elite – ≥35.0 FPTS/G
● Starter – 28.0–34.9
● Solid – 21.0–27.9
● Bench – 14.0–20.9
● Streamer – <14.0

Top Season Rankings

# Player Team FPTS/G Szn FPTS PTS REB AST STL BLK Tier
⭐ Elite Tier
1 A’ja Wilson LVA 47.45 1,898 23.7 10.2 2.5 1.57 2.31 Elite
2 Caitlin Clark IND 40.18 1,567 16.6 5.0 8.3 1.45 0.56 Elite
3 Alyssa Thomas PHO 37.54 1,539 13.4 8.6 8.2 1.56 0.43 Elite
4 Breanna Stewart NYL 38.80 1,513 19.0 7.3 3.4 1.41 1.32 Elite
5 Nneka Ogwumike LAS 35.13 1,511 17.8 7.5 2.3 1.45 0.51 Elite
6 Kelsey Plum LAS 35.06 1,473 19.3 2.9 5.1 1.07 0.06 Elite
7 Angel Reese ATL 36.93 1,440 14.1 12.6 3.0 1.39 0.59 Elite
8 Sabrina Ionescu NYL 37.30 1,417 17.8 4.8 5.7 1.13 0.37 Elite
9 Paige Bueckers DAL 36.17 1,411 19.2 3.9 5.4 1.58 0.50 Elite
10 Napheesa Collier MIN 42.40 1,314 21.3 8.0 3.0 1.67 1.38 Elite
11 Rhyne Howard ATL 37.15 1,300 17.8 4.6 4.0 1.60 0.74 Elite
● Starter Tier
12 Dearica Hamby LAS 33.90 1,458 16.3 8.0 3.1 1.47 0.37 Starter
13 Aaliyah Boston IND 32.69 1,438 14.4 8.3 3.2 1.10 1.07 Starter
14 Allisha Gray ATL 33.63 1,413 17.7 5.1 3.2 1.08 0.48 Starter
15 Jackie Young LVA 32.69 1,406 16.1 4.2 4.8 1.18 0.29 Starter
16 Skylar Diggins CHI 32.03 1,377 15.3 2.5 6.1 1.39 0.84 Starter
17 Kelsey Mitchell IND 30.39 1,337 19.1 1.9 2.8 0.81 0.14 Starter
18 Courtney Williams MIN 30.37 1,336 12.4 5.1 6.1 1.09 0.35 Starter
19 Chennedy Carter LVA 28.41 1,250 17.5 3.5 3.1 1.09 0.18 Starter
20 Azura Stevens CHI 30.39 1,246 12.1 7.7 2.0 1.16 1.04 Starter
21 Chelsea Gray LVA 29.58 1,242 11.6 3.8 5.9 1.43 0.69 Starter
22 Arike Ogunbowale DAL 32.57 1,238 17.3 3.0 4.2 1.53 0.21 Starter
23 Sonia Citron WAS 28.56 1,228 14.9 4.0 2.4 1.25 0.39 Starter
24 Tina Charles CON 29.17 1,225 15.5 7.0 1.9 0.81 0.46 Starter
25 Jonquel Jones NYL 31.72 1,205 13.1 8.3 2.6 0.57 1.15 Starter
26 Satou Sabally NYL 31.67 1,172 15.3 5.8 3.1 1.21 0.36 Starter
27 Kamilla Cardoso CHI 28.20 1,100 12.2 8.3 2.2 0.42 1.28 Starter
28 Marina Mabrey TOR 30.36 1,093 14.8 4.2 4.0 0.84 0.37 Starter
29 Brittney Sykes TOR 29.66 1,068 15.0 4.1 3.9 1.38 0.40 Starter
● Solid Tier
30 Shakira Austin WAS 27.03 1,189 12.4 7.0 1.4 1.14 1.06 Solid
31 Olivia Miles MIN 29.59 1,184 14.8 4.3 4.4 1.00 0.20 Solid
32 Kiki Iriafen WAS 26.92 1,158 13.3 8.5 1.6 0.59 0.16 Solid
33 Alanna Smith DAL 27.40 1,151 9.7 5.5 2.8 1.32 1.65 Solid
34 Jewell Loyd LVA 27.30 1,147 14.5 3.5 2.4 1.11 0.25 Solid
35 Azzi Fudd DAL 27.86 1,142 15.0 2.3 2.5 1.60 0.30 Solid
36 Gabby Williams GSV 27.13 1,140 11.0 4.2 4.1 2.00 0.41 Solid
37 Kayla McBride MIN 27.67 1,079 14.4 2.5 3.2 1.25 0.09 Solid
38 Veronica Burton GSV 25.19 1,058 9.1 3.9 5.2 1.19 0.57 Solid
39 Ariel Atkins CHI 27.74 1,054 13.5 3.3 3.2 1.47 0.55 Solid
40 Natasha Howard MIN 25.55 1,048 12.2 6.1 1.8 1.07 0.64 Solid
41 Kahleah Copper CHI 27.10 1,030 16.3 3.3 1.7 0.89 0.16 Solid
42 Kayla Thornton GSV 25.10 1,029 11.0 5.9 1.3 1.23 0.30 Solid
43 Rickea Jackson LAS 25.13 1,005 14.6 3.6 1.6 0.65 0.37 Solid
44 Brionna Jones ATL 27.32 983 13.1 6.6 1.9 1.19 0.67 Solid
45 Saniya Rivers CON 21.66 910 8.8 2.8 2.7 1.48 0.90 Solid
46 Janelle Salaun GSV 22.94 872 11.3 5.1 1.2 0.61 0.08 Solid
47 Myisha Hines-Allen LVA 21.39 834 8.0 5.8 2.9 0.80 0.30 Solid
48 Ezi Magbegor SEA 25.94 830 9.4 6.6 2.0 0.82 1.99 Solid
49 Courtney Vandersloot CHI 24.81 819 9.5 3.2 5.8 1.31 0.42 Solid
50 Brittney Griner CON 21.99 814 11.4 5.0 1.3 0.26 1.18 Solid
51 DeWanna Bonner PHO 22.12 796 11.0 4.3 1.4 0.85 0.39 Solid
52 Jordin Canada ATL 26.00 754 10.7 3.1 5.4 1.68 0.27 Solid
53 Tiffany Hayes GSV 23.40 725 11.8 3.6 2.8 0.72 0.19 Solid
54 Emma Meesseman NYL 28.58 686 13.4 5.1 3.2 1.24 0.77 Starter
● Bench / Late Round Targets
55 Erica Wheeler LAS 20.96 922 9.1 2.7 3.6 1.08 0.17 Bench
56 Naz Hillmon ATL 20.20 889 7.9 6.1 1.9 0.56 0.34 Bench
57 Sami Whitcomb PHO 20.50 882 8.8 2.7 2.6 0.91 0.26 Bench
58 Elizabeth Williams CHI 19.48 838 8.0 4.9 1.8 0.77 0.95 Bench
59 Leonie Fiebich NYL 20.78 831 8.8 3.7 2.0 1.05 0.32 Bench
60 Bridget Carleton POR 18.65 802 7.1 3.7 2.0 0.83 0.25 Bench
61 NaLyssa Smith LVA 19.45 798 8.8 5.8 0.8 0.52 0.62 Bench
62 Aneesah Morrow CON 19.62 785 7.7 6.9 0.5 0.78 0.44 Bench
63 Jessica Shepard DAL 19.90 756 7.5 6.8 2.6 0.47 0.09 Bench
64 Lexie Hull IND 18.15 744 7.1 3.9 1.6 1.11 0.29 Bench
65 Gabriela Jaquez CHI 18.60 725 8.6 4.3 1.7 0.70 0.10 Bench
66 Natisha Hiedeman SEA 16.27 716 7.6 1.8 2.7 0.79 0.17 Bench
67 Dominique Malonga SEA 16.61 698 7.7 4.6 0.9 0.41 0.67 Bench
68 Olivia Nelson-Ododa CON 17.74 674 7.3 4.9 0.7 0.72 1.14 Bench
69 Temi Fagbenle TOR 18.92 662 7.6 5.3 1.4 0.80 0.69 Bench
70 Natasha Mack PHO 17.42 627 4.6 5.8 1.0 0.85 1.48 Bench
71 Sophie Cunningham IND 18.76 619 8.5 3.3 1.5 0.87 0.18 Bench
72 Aziaha James DAL 15.72 613 7.5 2.9 1.6 0.63 0.18 Bench
73 Maddy Siegrist DAL 21.61 605 12.0 4.3 0.9 0.63 0.53 Solid

2026 Sleeper Targets

Five players flying under the radar who our model believes are being undervalued heading into draft season.

Sleeper Pick #1
Kiki Iriafen
Washington Mystics • C/F • Rank #32
13.3
PTS/G
8.5
REB/G
26.9
FPTS/G
A second-year big with elite rebounding instincts, Iriafen projects for 8.5 boards per game in a Washington frontcourt that should funnel her plenty of touches. At her current ADP she’s being treated as a bench piece – draft her as a starter. The 0.59 steal rate also punches above her positional expectations.

Sleeper Pick #2
Azzi Fudd
Dallas Wings • G • Rank #35
15.0
PTS/G
2.2
3PM/G
27.9
FPTS/G
Health has been Fudd’s only enemy. When she’s on the floor, the volume and efficiency are both there – a projected 2.2 threes per game at a Dallas guard spot that’s wide open is a fantasy goldmine. If she stays healthy for 40+ games, this ranking looks laughably cheap. The steal rate of 1.6 per game is a sneaky bonus.

Sleeper Pick #3
Saniya Rivers
Connecticut Sun • G • Rank #45
8.8
PTS/G
1.48
STL/G
21.7
FPTS/G
Don’t sleep on the steal machine. Rivers projects for a whopping 1.48 steals per game – among the best in the league – and with 42 remaining games on the schedule, that’s a mountain of defensive fantasy value. Her combined steal+block contribution at her draft price makes her one of the best value plays in deep leagues.

Sleeper Pick #4
Janelle Salaun
Golden State Valkyries • F • Rank #46
11.3
PTS/G
5.1
REB/G
22.9
FPTS/G
The young Valkyries forward is on track for a breakout season. Salaun’s 1.8 threes per game projection combined with strong rebounding on a team that needs her to carry offensive load means she has genuine upside beyond these projections. At 38 remaining games, her season FPTS ceiling is much higher if Golden State leans on her development.

Sleeper Pick #5
Alanna Smith
Dallas Wings • F/C • Rank #33
1.65
BLK/G
1.32
STL/G
27.4
FPTS/G
Here’s the deal: 1.65 blocks AND 1.32 steals per game. That dual-threat defensive production is incredibly rare, and the fantasy scoring system’s 2x multipliers on both categories make Smith a statistical anomaly at her draft price. She’s a pick-up who fills categories most other bigs can’t touch. Grab her in the middle rounds and smile.



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Ildemaro Vargas extends hit streak, passes Goldschmidt in Diamondbacks record book

No “Drip” drama here.

Arizona Diamondbacks infielder Ildemaro Vargas needed just one at-bat in Friday’s game against the Chicago Cubs to extend his hitting streak to 27 games dating back to last season.

He now stands alone in second place for the longest hitting streak in franchise history, passing Paul Goldschmidt (26).

He sits just three games away from tying Luis Gonzalez’s franchise-leading mark of 30.

Batting second in the order, Vargas turned on an 87-mph splitter for a single up the middle. It was Arizona’s second hit of the frame after Geraldo Perdomo’s leadoff single.

In addition to passing Goldschmidt in the franchise record books for most consecutive hits, Vargas set a new hitting record for a player born in Venezuela. He passed Wilson Ramos (2019 New York Mets) for the top spot.

The streak is also the second-longest since Detroit’s Ron LeFlore in 1976.

Vargas continues to be one of the biggest bright spots for the Diamondbacks.

Entering play Friday, Vargas paced the Diamondbacks in batting average (.378), OPS (1.087), home runs (six) and RBIs (20) despite playing in 23 of Arizona’s 30 games.

The early hitting didn’t lead to runs, however, with Chicago getting out of the top of the first inning unscathed before tacking on three runs in the bottom half.

Vargas, however, trimmed Chicago’s early lead to 3-1 with an RBI single in the third inning.

Catch the rest of Diamondbacks-Cubs on the Arizona Sports app, 98.7 and ArizonaSports.com.



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