Colorado Rockies vs. Andrew Suarez

The Rockies are one of the best teams in baseball against left-handed pitching and now get to face one at home. Suarez has actually fared well against the Rockies this year and both starts happened to be in Coors, but I’m willing to bet the third time's a charm for the Rockies. Right-handed batters have a very solid slash line of .284/.341/.481 with a .352 wOBA against Suarez on the year. Right-handed hitters have also made an insane amount of hard contact against him at 43.9-percent.

Nolan Arenado and Trevor Story are very obviously the two guys were going to look at immediately. Arenado is batting .388 with a 1.265 OPS against southpaws while Story is hitting a cool .327 with an OPS over 1.000 himself. Couple that with the fact they’re at home and they’re going to be two guys you want in your lineups.

The Rockies don’t just have two plus batters against left-handed pitching, however. DJ LeMahieu , Ryan McMahon , Matt Holliday and Ian Desmond . All four have an OPS of .833 or better versus southpaws and all four have .367 wOBA’s and above. McMahon homered on Tuesday and both he and Holliday are cheap and you need them to be able to fit both Arenado and Story.

I’m not totally against guys like Charlie Blackmon , David Dahl and Carlos González either. I don’t love the lefty-lefty matchup, but the fact that they’re getting to hit in Coors is always a bonus.

Primary Option(s): Nolan Arenado , Trevor Story , DJ LeMahieu , Ian Desmond , Matt Holliday

Secondary Option(s): Charlie Blackmon , Ryan McMahon , David Dahl , Carlos González

Philadelphia Phillies vs. Sandy Alcantara

Alcantara has made one Major League appearance this year and it actually went well. That being said, Alcantara hasn’t been anything special at Triple-A this year. He is only host to a 6.85 K/9 and has a 4.65 xFIP. He’s also posted a 42.9-percent fly ball rate which doesn’t bode well for him against a powerful lineup such as Philadelphia’s.

The Phillies have a bunch of different bats that have plus numbers against right-handed pitching. Let’s start with Rhys Hoskins who has hit 24 of his 27 homers against righties and has a .532 SLG and .272 ISO. Two of the team’s new additions have been great and have shown out against RHP. Justin Bour has a .267 ISO and .377 wOBA and Wilson Ramos has a 1.109 OPS and .309 ISO himself.

Roman Quinn is having himself an opening act with the Phillies lately. Just over his last 10 games he’s slashed .394/.412/.606 with five extra-base hits, six runs scored and has stolen two bags. Quinn has an .865 OPS versus righties and is an excellent addition to any Philly stack.

Carlos Santana added onto his already six game hit streak on Tuesday with a home run, giving him three bombs over his last nine games and 21 on the year. Santana is more a secondary play because his price is a little too steep for my liking. Nick Williams is also a secondary play on this slate as he has an .800-plus OPS against RHP on the year.

The Phillies middle infield are also all in play as secondary options. Scott Kingery probably has the least amount of upside but he’s the cheapest of the bunch. Asdrubal Cabrera is the hottest of the three but he’s also the most expensive. César Hernández was ice cold before Tuesday’s game.

Primary Option(s): Rhys Hoskins , Justin Bour , Wilson Ramos , Roman Quinn

Secondary Option(s): Carlos Santana , Nick Williams , Asdrubal Cabrera , César Hernández , Scott Kingery