Back to DFS news
MLBWatch impactYahoo SportsScore 48Tue, Jul 14, 10:05 AM UTC

Is Kyle Schwarber beating Father Time with his evolving power swing? 'I hope so'

By Jorge Perez· Founder, V12 DFS

Is Kyle Schwarber beating Father Time with his evolving power swing? 'I hope so'

This is context, not an automatic lineup change. It becomes actionable only when it connects to the slate, price, ownership, or confirmed role.

context

Kyle Schwarber's sustained power production since joining Philadelphia represents a legitimately durable dfs asset in a landscape where aging power hitters typically see sharp usage decay. The premise—that Schwarber is defying typical aging curves through technical refinement—directly informs how the optimizer weights his ceiling on any given slate. If the mechanical evolution is real and repeatable, his upside floor stays elevated even on nights when the implied total or opposing pitcher might otherwise suppress his ownership. V12 ranks power consistency like Schwarber's as a leverage signal: when the field fades a proven bat based on matchup noise alone, the contrarian alignment tightens.

The dfs read hinges on whether Schwarber's approach change correlates to specific game contexts. A Phillies lineup facing a pitcher with elevated fly-ball rates, or a slate carrying a 9+ run game total, amplifies Schwarber's ceiling projection in a way that doesn't automatically translate to ownership surge—especially in GPPs where the field often skews toward flavor-of-the-week role changes and injuries over fundamental skill persistence. His salary typically reflects his baseline value; the leverage opportunity sits in the gap between what the market assigns and what a three-year track record of power output, even if mechanically refreshed, actually suggests on a per-plate-appearance basis.

For a v12 user, the angle is simple: verify Schwarber's recent production and plate discipline metrics on the specific slate (park factor, opposing starter splits, Phillies' recent pace), then cross-reference his ownership projection against his ceiling. If ownership sits below 10% despite a favorable matchup, the pivot makes sense as a high-floor, high-ceiling stack anchor or standalone contrarian. If he's chalky, accept his value and let others hunt for the unpruned edges of the lineup. Either way, his power evolution is a skill signal, not a guarantee—lock accordingly.

Build with V12

Turn this MLB news into a lineup tonight

V12's MLB engine reads slate context, builds a candidate pool, runs configured simulations, ranks the portfolio with ownership and behavioral pattern signals, and ships a FanDuel-ready CSV. The news above becomes one input among many — not a forced lineup change.

Original report

Open Yahoo Sports story