The currency of fantasy baseball shifts constantly, but no asset changes hands faster, or alters the standings quicker, than the stolen base.
In rotisserie formats, a single high-volume week can catapult you up three spots in the standings.
In head-to-head leagues, it is the ultimate swing category, capable of securing a matchup victory Sunday afternoon with one final, desperate swipe.
Unlike home runs, which rely on unpredictable power surges, stolen bases can be engineered.
If you cannot trade for an elite speedster, you can stream your way to category dominance by targeting the holy trinity of base-stealing metrics: aggressive managers, slow pitchers and weak-armed catchers.
The strategy begins with identifying vulnerable batteries.
Though Eury Pérez has allowed an MLB-high 18 stolen bases this season, his current stint on the 15-day injured list means managers must tuck away his name for future exploitation.
Instead, immediate attention turns to Rays right-hander Drew Rasmussen, who has surrendered 13 stolen bases.
Rasmussen’s slow delivery is exacerbated by his catchers, Nick Fortes and Hunter Feduccia. Together, this catching duo has thrown out just 17 percent of base runners on 59 total attempts.
Rasmussen’s upcoming schedule presents a gold mine for waiver-wire streaming — his next three scheduled starts come against the Red Sox, Dodgers and Royals.
Managers should aggressively add and start any secondary speed options from these opposing rosters during those specific series.
Twins starter Joe Ryan presents an equally lucrative target.
Ryan has yielded 11 stolen bases this year, plagued by a slow path to the plate. His primary backstop, Victor Caratini, offers virtually no resistance, posting a dismal 12 percent caught-stealing rate on 25 attempts.
This battery is currently in a severe slide, having surrendered six stolen bases over the past week alone. Speed-oriented streaming options become high-priority targets as Ryan prepares to face the Royals, Cardinals and Rangers over his next three outings.
Executing this strategy requires looking beyond everyday starters. Fantasy managers should scour the waiver wire for specialist bench bats — players who might start just two or three times a week, but possess elite sprint-speed and a green light from their managers.
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When these speedsters draw a lineup spot against Rasmussen or Ryan, or enter late as a pinch-runner against Fortes or Caratini, their probability of a stolen base skyrockets.
Ultimately, stolen bases remain the most movable category in fantasy baseball because most managers treat them as a passive byproduct of roster construction. By treating the category as a weekly tactical puzzle, you can manufacture elite speed production without paying a premium in trades.
Monitor the IL status of Pérez, attack the upcoming schedules of Rasmussen and Ryan, and exploit the defensive deficiencies behind the plate to outrun your league.
Howard Bender is the head of content at FantasyAlarm.com. Follow him on X @rotobuzzguy, catch him on the award-winning “Fantasy Alarm Radio Show” on SiriusXM Fantasy Sports Radio (Ch. 87) weekdays from 6-8 p.m. and dominate your leagues with the latest baseball news and advice from Fantasy Alarm.


