Recap: What OKC Thunder said on Wednesday, May 6
OKC Thunder recap: Key takeaways from May 6 media session
Updated fantasy baseball rankings for middle infielders have been released, focusing on shortstops and second basemen. The rankings are based on player performance data as of May, excluding injured and minor league players.

The calendar has moved to May, which means itās time to get some positional Shuffle Ups your way. We have enough data to form some actionable opinions (in some cases), or at least educated guesses (in some other cases).
The players below are salaried and ranked as if I were entering a fresh draft tonight. Whatās happened to this point is an audition, nothing more. Donāt get hung up on the salaries in a vacuum, which are just comparison tools. Players at the same salary are considered even.
Most of the players who have 2B or SS eligibility in Yahoo leagues are on this list. I excluded anyone currently on the IL, and didnāt rank anyone in the minors.
Have some respectful disagreement? Thatās good, thatās why we have a game. Share your thoughts anytime on social media: catch me onĀ Twitter/XĀ or onĀ Bluesky.
And away we go.
$38 Bobby Witt Jr.
$36 Elly De La Cruz
$30 Fernando TatĆs Jr.
$25 Trea Turner
$24 CJ Abrams
$24 Brice Turang
$22 Ozzie Albies
$22 Zach Neto
$22 Jazz Chisholm Jr.
$21 Nico Hoerner
Worried about Witt, looking to trade him? Trade him to me. The average and steals are where weād expect, and thereās no reasonable reason to expect he wonāt hit between 20-30 homers when the season is over. Heās still the fastest player in baseball and in a prime age pocket. Patience, please.
De La Cruzās pop disappeared in the second half last year, but whatever that problem was, heās corrected it. And Ellyās plate discipline is better than many realize ā heās above board in chase rate and walk rate, and at least his strikeout rate is improving. De La Cruz doesnāt have to apologize for his hard-hit profile; itās as red as the uniform he wears. This is a superstar spreading his wings.
TatĆs now has second-base eligibility, so enjoy the flexibility. Maybe a home run will come later this week. If youāre looking for positives, he has an expected average of .280 and an expected slugging of .402 ā heās been unlucky. His has actually improved this year, too. It will work out.
The latest rankings for shortstops include players evaluated based on their performance data as of May, providing actionable insights for fantasy drafts.
Second basemen are ranked based on their current performance and salary, with players considered even if they share the same salary.
Players currently on the injured list (IL) and those in the minor leagues are excluded from the rankings.
The rankings are influenced by player performance data, salary comparisons, and the overall context of their auditions in the current season.
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Chisholm still carries a strikeout problemĀ despite acceptable walk and chase rates. There are two ways to slice that ā you appreciate his respectable zone judgment, but it also means heās getting beat inside the strike zone more than youād like. Normally, when you see a .214 average and a .349 slugging tied to a presumable star, you assume the bad-luck signs must be flashing, but Chisholmās hard-hit metrics support those puny stats. Alas, we canāt go too low on Chisholm, as heās on pace for about 18 homers and 50 steals.
$19 Gunnar Henderson
$18 Otto Lopez
$18 JosƩ Caballero
$18 Ketel Marte
$17 JJ Wetherholt
$17 Kevin McGonigle
$17 Maikel GarcĆa
$17 Willy Adames
$15 Corey Seager
$15 JosƩ Altuve
$14 Xavier Edwards
$14 Geraldo Perdomo
Maybe Lopez is a little over his skis so far, but the expected stats (.298 average, .479 slugging) still validate him. You worry that Lopez could be exploited by a free-swinging approach and a puny walk rate, and the Miami ballpark doesnāt help, either. But the category juice plays, and heck, heās a career .270 batter. Heās set to beat, perhaps smash, his spring ADP.
It hurts me to rank Seager this low, but heās never been a runner and we always have to assume heāll need some IL time. Heās also in an age-32 season, so some skill erosion is to be expected. Nobody misses the sauna atmosphere that was The Ballpark at Arlington, but we do miss the scoring atmosphere ā the newer park has always favored the pitchers.
I moved Perdomoās salary down but I didnāt collapse it ā he still has more walks than strikeouts and an OPS+ of 111. The Diamondbacks wonāt move him to the bottom of the order, and you can always bank on the steals. Figure on 12-15 homers this time around, but the average will ultimately be a positive.
$13 Bo Bichette
$12 Xander Bogaerts
$11 Dansby Swanson
$11 Brandon Lowe
$11 Colson Montgomery
$10 Konnor Griffin
$9 Ceddanne Rafaela
$8 Ildemaro Vargas
$7 Casey Schmitt
$6 Matt McLain
$6 Jeremiah Jackson
$6 Luis ArrƔez
$6 Daniel Schneemann
$6 Trevor Story
$6 Ernie Clement
$5 Brooks Lee
$5 Angel Martinez
$5 Cole Young
$5 Brayan Rocchio
$5 Jacob Wilson
$5 Masyn Winn
$5 Oswald Peraza
$5 Luis GarcĆa Jr.
$5 Colt Keith
$5 Ezequiel Tovar
$5 Travis Bazzana
Vargas is a tricky case, though Iāve bumped him up a little bit. Everything heās done this year has been wonderful and metric-supported; his expected batting average is .339, his expected slugging .498. But weāre talking aboutĀ a 34-year-old journeyman whoās been a below-average offensive playerĀ almost every step of the way (a mediocre 86 OPS+). Iām rooting for Vargas because I love players who swing at anything but make contact anyway, not to mention he covers multiple positions and heās become a recent pickup of mine. But this is the type of player you extend a tiny leash towards; be ready to bail at the first sign of extended trouble. Root with your heart, but make decisions with your head.
I was willing to write off McLainās mediocre 2025 season to the first year back off a major injury, but heās also off to a horrible 2026 start and was recently dropped in the batting order. The Reds have a lot of moving parts to their infield ā Sal Stewart has started to pick up 2B reps ā and McLain probably wonāt get the entire season to come around, like he was given last year. At least heās running when he gets the opportunity, but Iām legitimately concerned here.
Bichette is swinging at everything, like he always does, but the average has been comically unlucky ā the Statcast data says he should be at .287. We canāt count on stolen bases here, and his power profile hasnāt been great the last few years. Sometimes a young player looks like a sure star but turns into a good-not-great player. Thatās the file Iām putting Bichette in right now.
$4 Gleyber Torres
$4 Nasim NuƱez
$4 Luke Keaschall
$4 Jose Fernandez
$4 AndrƩs GimƩnez
$4 Mauricio Dubon
$4 Nolan Gorman
$3 Nick Gonzales
$3 Chase Meidroth
$3 Austin Martin
$3 Hyeseong Kim
$3 Willi Castro
$2 Edouard Julien
$2 Bryson Stott
$2 Jeff McNeil
$2 Amed Rosario
$2 Brice Matthews
$2 Brett Baty
$2 Caleb Durbin
$2 Marcus Semien
$2 Marcelo Mayer
$1 Curtis Mead
$1 David Hamilton
$1 Ezequiel Duran
$1 J.P. Crawford
$1 Ben Williamson