Welcome to the Fantasy Baseball Risers and Fallers article for Week 22 (8/23 – 8/29). I will be covering some of the hottest and coldest players in baseball over the last seven days. This column aims to provide insight into the featured players’ success and/or struggles. We’ll try and discover if their recent performances have any staying power or if it was just a flash in the pan. This will be the season’s final Risers & Fallers column, with the fantasy baseball playoffs underway in some leagues and about to begin the following week in others. I want to thank each of you who took the time to read the column this season, cheers!

The NFL is set to kick off in less than two weeks, which is exciting but also makes it harder and harder to focus on baseball, even with the playoffs around the corner. Laid-back fantasy managers have mostly checked out by now, but if you can’t get enough of this stuff, then you’re probably still reading this article. Experienced and competitive managers (like you) know that this is the time to hunker down and focus on the postseason. This is where we separate the serious from the casual. While most of us may have a set it and forget it lineup by now, some lesser-known players mentioned below could be worth adding to your rosters to help boost your team.

It’s always important to pay attention to which players are “rising” and which ones are “falling.” I’ve tried my best all season to focus on fringe roster-worthy guys that have been flying under the radar. For example, I didn’t always cover superstars like Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Shohei Ohtani, and Fernando Tatis Jr., as they were steadily “rising” throughout the season. They’re obviously all amazing players, but it would have been redundant to cover them on a semi-weekly basis. Their awesomeness was well documented across the fantasy baseball landscape. Anyway, with all of that out of the way, let’s get into the final article of the season.

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Risers

Salvador Perez (C – KC)
How good has Salvador Perez been this season? Well, he’s already slugged a career-best 38 homers and driven in 94 runs with a month of baseball left to play. Overall, he’s slashing .277/.315/.544 with 63 runs scored, which is another career-high, in addition to the HR and RBI. He’s coming off a ridiculous week in which he went 10-for-28 (.357/.455/1.000) with six home runs, 14 RBI, and a 5:5 K/BB ratio. He swatted two grand slams and has now homered in five straight games and 8-of-10 overall. He just set an American League record for home runs by a catcher in a season as well. In all of baseball, only Shohei Ohtani (41) has more runs than Perez. He’s easily been the best catcher in fantasy and has been a top-50 player overall.

It’s been a remarkable run for the 31-year-old backstop who missed all of the 2019 season while recovering from Tommy John surgery. He also missed 23 games during the shortened 2020 campaign due to a left eye central serous chorioretinopathy, which blurred his vision. He’s come back with force this year, posting career-bests in Barrel Rate (15.3%), Hard Hit Rate (55.3%), Average Exit Velocity (92.7 mph), and Max Exit Velocity (114.4 mph). While the Player of The Week award will come out after this article has been published, it would be shocking if Perez didn’t win it for the American League. It was a banner week in what has been a banner season for the backstop.

Antonio Senzatela (SP – COL)
Senzatela made two starts last week against the Cubs and the Dodgers. He allowed just one run while striking out 11 and walking three across 13 innings. He earned the win against Los Angeles on Sunday and should have picked up the victory against the Cubs earlier in the week, but Colorado’s shaky bullpen blew the lead. Rockies pitchers don’t typically attract much attention, especially in the fantasy community. Sure, German Marquez and Kyle Freeland have had their moments. Jon Gray has looked good at times this season as well, but Senzatela, who’s been their most reliable starter over the last month, hasn’t received much fanfare at all.

This season, he got off an unproductive start, compiling a 4.76 ERA, 1.43 WHIP, and 55:20 K/BB ratio over his first 81 1/3 innings (15 starts). In addition to his lackluster production on the field, he had a few stints on the injured list back in May (strained groin) and July (COVID-19) as well. He’s stepped his game up over the last seven starts, though, putting up a 3.09 ERA, 1.15 WHIP, and 32:17 K/BB ratio across 43 2/3 innings. He only has a 1-2 record to show for it, but he’s notched quality starts in 6-of-7 games and currently has reeled off four straight. Senzatela won’t blow you away with his stuff. He currently ranks in the 10th percentile or worse in Strikeout Rate, Whiff Rate, xBA allowed, and Chase Rate. However, he’s got a stellar 5.1% Walk Rate (91st percentile) and 53.4% Groundball rate. In addition to that, he’s only allowed nine home runs all season (1.7% HR rate). He lacks the big strikeout upside that fantasy managers covet, which is the main reason he’s rostered in only 9% of Yahoo! leagues. While he may not be a pitcher you’d like to rely on in the fantasy playoffs, his recent run should still be recognized.

Jorge Alfaro (C – MIA)
Alfaro has been raking over the last seven contests and was a big reason why the struggling Marlins went 4-2 last week. The 28-year-old backstop went 11-for-28 (.393/.393/.571) with a home run, nine RBI, and a stolen base over that span. He swatted his first homer since July 5 and is riding a seven-game hitting streak. It’s arguably been his best stretch of the year, but, unfortunately, his season has been a major disappointment overall. He’s got a .248/.286/.357 batting line with four home runs, 29 RBI, and eight stolen bases across 266 at-bats. Alfaro initially showed promise in his first full season with the Marlins after coming over from Philadelphia as part of the J.T. Realmuto trade.