Anthony Rizzo

Anthony Rizzo

35-Year-Old First Baseman1B
 Free Agent  
Free Agent
2025 Fantasy Outlook
Rizzo is now a free agent as the Yankees declined his club option for the 2025 season. We can't blame them for doing so, as Rizzo has hit .210/.291/.299 since that ill-fated collision with Fernando Tatis Jr. at first base on May 28, 2023. Rizzo was hitting quite well before that incident but has been a shell of his former self since that time. While he did hit 32 homers as recently as 2022, his indicators paint a dismal picture, as only his strike zone judgement and contact abilities remain intact. What Rizzo does put into play is not of the same contact quality it once was unless he is jumping on a mistake pitch. It is tough to envision him recovering even a fraction of his former fantasy value unless he were to pull off some sort of 2021 Joey Votto performance. Rizzo would need the right park and a 100 percent clear head to pull off that feat, and it might just be that Rizzo hangs up his cleats given how rapidly his numbers are plunging into the aging curve. Read Past Outlooks
RANKS
Rest of Season
From Preseason
#380
ADP
$Signed a two-year, $34 million contract with the Yankees in November of 2022. The Yankees declined a $17 million team option for 2025 in November of 2024, paying a $6 million buyout.
Healthy entering 2025
1BFree Agent  
February 21, 2025
Rizzo said Friday that he is fully healthy and remains eager to play in 2025 despite not having a team heading into spring training, Ken Rosenthal and Brendan Kuty of The Athletic report.
ANALYSIS
While Rizzo may still want to play in the majors, it doesn't seem there are many teams interested in bringing in an aging veteran who is coming off his worst regular season in 13 years (.636 OPS) and hasn't reached the 100-game mark since 2022 due to troubles staying healthy. He most recently suffered two fractured fingers on his right hand after getting hit by a pitch in late September, which forced him to sit out until the ALCS. His hand has since fully recovered, and he's been going through his normal offseason routine, though the three-time All-Star acknowledged that if enough time passes and he still remains on the open market, it may be time to start thinking about retirement.
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Batting Stats
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Left/Right Batting Splits
Since 2023
 
 
+1%
OPS vs LHP
2025
No Stats
2024
 
 
+23%
OPS vs RHP
2023
 
 
+22%
OPS vs LHP
OPS PA R HR RBI SB AVG OBP SLG
Since 2023vs Left .677 184 13 1 13 0 .274 .348 .329
Since 2023vs Right .672 612 70 19 63 0 .225 .306 .366
2025vs Left 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2025vs Right 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2024vs Left .543 97 4 0 3 0 .221 .299 .244
2024vs Right .669 278 34 8 32 0 .231 .302 .367
2023vs Left .825 87 9 1 10 0 .333 .402 .423
2023vs Right .674 334 36 11 31 0 .220 .308 .366
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Home/Away Batting Splits
Since 2023
 
 
+34%
OPS at Home
2025
No Stats
2024
 
 
+21%
OPS at Home
2023
 
 
+45%
OPS at Home
OPS PA R HR RBI SB AVG OBP SLG
Since 2023Home .773 394 45 13 41 0 .274 .350 .423
Since 2023Away .576 402 38 7 35 0 .200 .281 .294
2025Home 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2025Away 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2024Home .706 162 18 4 15 0 .254 .340 .366
2024Away .585 213 20 4 20 0 .210 .272 .313
2023Home .819 232 27 9 26 0 .288 .358 .462
2023Away .564 189 18 3 15 0 .188 .291 .273
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Recent RotoWire Articles Featuring Anthony Rizzo See More
Collette Calls: My 2025 AL LABR Squad
22 days ago
Jason Collette breaks down his AL LABR squad, which included the unexpected acquisition of Bobby Witt Jr.
The Z Files: The Wisdom of Crowds and ATC Projections
37 days ago
Todd Zola explains how projected playing time and a skills-based approach helps him identify upside plays late in a draft, as well as leading him to put Aaron Judge at the top of his personal rankings.
Collette Calls: Values in the Scrap Heap
51 days ago
Jason Collette highlights 10 sleepers going late in drafts, including second-year Nationals starter DJ Herz.
MLB DFS Picks: DraftKings Plays and Strategy for Wednesday, October 30
149 days ago
Anthony Rizzo is a solid player to use in a utility slot in DraftKings MLB DFS Showdown slates tonight, writes Dan Marcus.
MLB DFS Picks: FanDuel Plays and Strategy for World Series Game 4 on Tuesday, October 29
150 days ago
Tuesday's top MLB DFS options on FanDuel include Shohei Ohtani as the Dodgers look to complete a World Series sweep over the Yankees.
Past Fantasy Outlooks
2024
2023
2022
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2016
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2013
2012
2011
Given that he missed the final two months of the 2023 season due to post-concussion syndrome, Rizzo's draft-day cost is going to vary widely from league to league in 2024. The concussion happened during an awkward collision with Fernando Tatis in May -- three months before Rizzo was actually placed on the IL -- and he later acknowledged that he was having trouble seeing the ball for much of the summer. That shows in his game logs, as he slashed just .170/.271/.224 with one home run in 188 plate appearances between the beginning of June and the end of July. He suffered through a five-strikeout game July 30 at Baltimore, a few days before mercifully being shut down. While it was an ugly ordeal, durability is usually one of Rizzo's best skills and he can hopefully put last year in the rearview with a reinvigorating kind of opportunity to feast in the heart of the Yankees' beefed-up batting order. He won't be a consensus top-150 pick again but could certainly return that kind of value.
Likely by design to take advantage of the short right field porch in Yankee Stadium, Rizzo hit flyballs at a career high 49% clip. It worked as he pulled 16 of his 32 long balls into the right field seats in the Bronx, though Rizzo's 18.4% strikeout rate was its highest since 2014. More flyballs helped sink Rizzo's BABIP to .216, the lowest mark of his career, though the resulting power fueled a 132 wRC+, his best since 2019. Rizzo's contact and hard-hit rates remain solid, but he's approaching the age where skills start to decline. He re-upped with the Yankees on a two-year deal with a buyout/club option for a third year, so the short porch will once again be a bullseye. The elephant in the room is Rizzo has been one of the most shifted players and with the new rules, he could benefit. A buying opportunity exists if the room is ignoring this, but it's unwise to anticipate a huge difference.
Rizzo had a second consecutive disappointing season, but this time it was a full six-month campaign. His strikeout rate was typically low, but his batted ball profile yielded a low HR/FB and low BABIP. His flyball rate increased, but it was mitigated by a low HR/FB, resulting in many flyball outs. Further, Rizzo's line drive rate declined, doing more damage to his BABIP. Rizzo's average exit velocity was a career-high, though his mark on flyballs dipped a bit, explaining the low HR/FB. It appears Rizzo's underlying metrics are still mostly intact; he just had a prolonged stretch of bad luck on batted balls. A batting average rebound is likely, though Rizzo may fall short of a full bounce back in power. The good news is, after two down seasons, the market has soured on Rizzo, so the cost of acquisition is significantly discounted.
When models of consistency do not perform to expected levels, it is always frustrating, whether it be when the erstwhile laptop does not boot up on first attempt or when Rizzo stinks out of nowhere. For the past five seasons, we've been able to bank a solid average, 25-plus homers and 90-plus RBI with a handful of steals as we build the rest of our roster around his stability. Prorating his 2020 numbers would have gotten the desired homers, but the run production was way down as most of the roster around him had issues, and his batting average was a career worst. We hadn't seen numbers this bad since his sophomore slump in 2012. Like many hitters, fastballs were a problem in 2020 for Rizzo as his average against them dropped 103 points from 2019 while his slugging fell 220 points. We must lean on the track record here rather than let 60 games outweigh the previous 600 games. Pending free agency is a big motivator; buy back in.
There's nothing particularly exciting or sexy about drafting Rizzo, but he's one of the most consistent run producers in the game. While 27 home runs don't look great in a record-setting home-run season, he maintained a sub-15% K-rate and boosted his BB%, resulting in an OBP over .400 for the first time in his career. In total, his offensive contributions added up to a 141 wRC+, which put him 13th among qualified hitters. He's not a barrel rate darling, but Rizzo had a .391 xwOBA (16th, min. 100 PA), and his xBA was even higher than his actual average. Only three players have driven in more runs than Rizzo over the last five seasons (Nolan Arenado, Edwin Encarnacion, Nelson Cruz), and he has not fallen short of 600 PA since his first year with the Cubs in 2012. Throw in 5-to-10 stolen bases -- nothing to sneeze at in today's game -- and you have a fine building block for any fantasy team.
Heading into last draft season, conventional wisdom suggested Rizzo's strong health and bankable power made him one of the safer early-round building blocks, but that narrative won't be quite as prevalent anymore. Rizzo wasn't a bust, but his 25 homers were disappointing after he hit 31 or 32 between 2014 and 2017. His 74 runs -- aided by a month-long stay in the leadoff spot -- were also 15 fewer than he recorded in any of the prior four years. Rizzo's nadir came in April, during which the Cubs played a schedule littered with rainouts and poor-weather games. As the weather heated up, so did Rizzo's bat, as he slashed .329/.420/.550 and supplied 13 of his homers after the break. Inclement early-season weather remains a potential issue, but Rizzo actually owns a higher career wRC+ in the first half (134) than the second (126). That offers hope that last year's early slump was anomalous.
Rizzo has been remarkably consistent over the past three seasons, but don't let the carbon-copy counting stats fool you into thinking he's completely plateaued as a player; there was some skill growth in 2017. He improved his strikeout and walk rates roughly three percentage points each way, lifting his BB/K to 1.01 -- his previous career high was 0.74 -- which was the fifth-best mark in baseball. Rizzo's .397 xwOBA, up from .368 in 2016, ranked 12th among 301 players with at least 250 at-bats. He added almost 50 points to his OPS against lefties and Rizzo hit for power at Wrigley Field (15 homers). There's no need to overthink this one; Rizzo is a rock solid second-round pick, and a case can be made that he should sneak inside the first.
Coming off consecutive 30-home-run seasons, Rizzo entered the year with lofty expectations and met them. He tied his career high of 32 big flies and set new career highs in RBI and batting average. While he was unable to replicate the 17 steals he put up in 2015, it now seems like a crazy anomaly considering he only has 19 steals over his five major league seasons excluding that season. Rizzo is clearly one of the league's better power hitters, finishing in the top 20 in slugging percentage each of the last three seasons. He's also a consistently disciplined hitter, taking at least 73 walks each of the last four seasons. At 27 years old, Rizzo is entering his prime and figures to be hitting in the middle of a potent lineup for years to come considering the plethora of young hitting talent the Cubs have. While he won't be the first fantasy pick, Rizzo won't last long on draft boards in 2017.
What do you want from your fantasy first baseman? How about 30 home runs, 90 runs, 90 RBI and 10 stolen bases? Or a slash line of .282/.387/.519? That's more or less what Rizzo has averaged the last two seasons, and he's just 26 and in the heart of a strong lineup. He's walked at least 70 times three years in a row, and his career-high 17 stolen bases last year was a pleasant surprise. Sure, Paul Goldschmidt does everything a bit better than Rizzo, but Goldschmidt does everything better than everybody. Rizzo might be the second first baseman off the board in fantasy drafts this year, and he should have his first 100-run/100-RBI season as long as he stays healthy.
Though the Cubs have a lot of young offensive talent, many of them with prodigious power, most struggle to get on base. Not so with Rizzo, who drew 73 walks last year and finished with a team-high .386 on-base percentage. Oh, and he also led the team in home runs, RBI, runs, slugging percentage, and OPS. Despite all the young players coming up at the ranks at seemingly every position, the Cubs don't have a can't-miss prospect at first base (the closest thing to it is Dan Vogelbach), meaning Rizzo's job is safe. Once those other young hitters start getting on base, expect the 25-year-old Rizzo to start racking up 100-RBI seasons.
On a team without many offensive bright spots, Rizzo has to qualify as such. Now just 24, Rizzo already has 39 home runs under his belt as he set career highs in pretty much every counting category in 2013. Unfortunately, with the increase in playing time came a serious decrease in his slash line: .233/.323/.419 is just not going to cut it for the offensive leader of any team, but the numbers are even more glaring at a position like first base. His 76:127 BB:K ratio isn't bad for a slugger, but the .259 BABIP just crushed him last year. Expect his numbers to bounce back as the BABIP normalizes and he continues his growth. Otherwise, it could be another long season at Wrigley.
After annihilating Triple-A for a couple months, Rizzo got the call to the bigs and posted a .900-plus OPS in June and July. An August slump was mitigated by a solid September, and it looks like Rizzo could be the team's first baseman for the next half-decade or more. Rizzo could stand to take a few more walks, but his contact rate was good for a 22-year-old home-run hitter in the majors, and there's little doubt about his power. It's likely a question of when not if with this future star, and he should be locked into the No. 3 spot in the Cubs' lineup after settling in there upon arrival and delivering a .820 OPS last season.
Rizzo was the biggest chip coming back to the Padres in the Adrian Gonzalez deal and was considered to be the team's first baseman of the future. He possess tremendous raw power, great bat speed, and exhibits quality patience at the plate. After hitting .331/.404/.652 with 26 home runs at Triple-A over just 413 plate appearances, the Padres brought him up to the majors. To say that his cup of coffee with the team was anything but cold and bitter would be an understatement. Over 153 plate appearances in the show, Rizzo hit just one home run and posted a woeful .281 OBP despite a solid 13.7 percent walk rate. His 70 percent contact rate was brutal, and it had many experts wondering how much of his minor league totals were inflated by the hitter-friendly parks in the PCL, not to mention how Petco stifling left-handed power would translate to his overall production. However, Rizzo caught a break this winter as he was dealt to the Cubs, a far better hitting environment in which to operate. Rizzo will likely begin the season at Triple-A, as the Cubs give veteran minor league Bryan LaHair a shot. But a strong showing from Rizzo there could see him up in the majors at any point this season, especially if LaHair struggles.
Rizzo emerged over the past two seasons as Boston's top power prospect, a view that was cemented with 25-homer season between High-A Salem and Double-A Portland in 2010. He became the first 20-year-old to hit 20 homers in the Double-A Eastern League since 1998. His development since overcoming Hodgkin's Lymphoma in 2008 is remarkable and made him a valuable prospect, eventually landing him in Boston's deal with San Diego for Adrian Gonzalez. He has a good approach at the plate, though he could work deeper counts, and is ready as a defender at first base. He's viewed as a high-character guy and good teammate, and appears headed to become the Padres' everyday first baseman in 2012.
More Fantasy News
Club option declined
1BFree Agent  
November 2, 2024
The Yankees declined Rizzo's $17 million club option for 2025 on Saturday.
ANALYSIS
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Downtime helping injured fingers
1BNew York Yankees  
October 23, 2024
Rizzo said Wednesday that the time off between the ALCS and World Series has allowed swelling in his fractured fingers to subside, Greg Joyce of the New York Post reports.
ANALYSIS
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Absent from Game 3 lineup
1BNew York Yankees  
October 17, 2024
Rizzo is not in the lineup Thursday for Game 3 of the ALCS in Cleveland.
ANALYSIS
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Should start again in Game 2
1BNew York Yankees  
October 14, 2024
Rizzo fared well in Game 1 of the ALCS against the Guardians and is expected to be in the starting lineup Tuesday for Game 2, Bryan Hoch of MLB.com reports.
ANALYSIS
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Starting at first base in Game 1
1BNew York Yankees  
October 14, 2024
Rizzo will start at first base and bat eighth Monday in Game 1 of the ALCS versus the Guardians.
ANALYSIS
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Latest Fantasy Rumors
Reunion with Yankees?
1BFree Agent  
November 4, 2024
Gary Phillips of the New York Daily News "wouldn't be stunned" if Rizzo re-signs with the Yankees after the club declined his $17 million team option for 2025 on Saturday.
ANALYSIS
New York paid the $6 million buyout rather than bringing him back at that salary, which wasn't a surprise since he was limited to 92 regular-season games in 2024 and had a .228/.301/.335 slash line. Rizzo said in September that he hopes to retire with the Yankees, but the organization is undoubtedly looking for an upgrade at first base this winter, and it's unclear if the 35-year-old is willing to take on a bench role.
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