Every Monday we'll take a look at the Fantasy Baseball gainers and decliners in our Fantasy Stockwatch.

We said it would be a busy week for roster decisions, rotation calls and winners/losers of position battles. We were right on. Now in the final week of spring training it is all about staying healthy for opening day and monitoring those starting the season on the DL. Those DL assignments come into play a lot later this week if your league is not counting the pair of games in Japan. Some leagues might lock rosters Tuesday morning for the enter period March 25 through April 6. Play it safe in your lineup Monday night, start your healthy guys, if that is the case.

Evan Longoria, 3B, Tampa Bay
After the Rays finally went to Delmon Young and B.J. Upton last season, we had confidence they wouldn't get cheap again. Nope. They demoted the elite third base prospect Monday, apparently in a move to keep him from being a free agent a year sooner. He will still be on the fast track to the majors in the first half, but he kills Fantasy owners who were counting on him out of the gate. The great Willy Aybar is blocking him in Tampa. Egads!
Cliff Lee, SP, Cleveland
Lee beat out prospects Aaron Laffey and Jeremy Sowers for the No. 5 starter's spot in the Indians rotation. He might not look like much, but anyone getting regular starts for a potent offense/contender like the Indians has solid Fantasy value. Lee is a sleeper in deeper leagues, especially if you recall he is a former 18-game winner and still isn't 30 years old. He might start slow -- control-and-command lefties tend to -- but he can be solid in the second half. Look at his second half numbers in 2005 and '06 -- when he was 14-8 and 18-5.
John Smoltz, SP, Atlanta
Smoltz was already a risky Fantasy ace because of his age -- he will turn 41 in mid-May -- but now a balky shoulder/neck has him potentially opening the year on the DL to boot. He still might be ready to make a start April 6 vs. the Mets, but he was a preseason pick here to disappoint Fantasy owners and clearly he will be a starter you will have to monitor on a start-to-start basis this season.
Kerry Wood, RP, Chicago Cubs
Lou Piniella makes sense when he decides Wood -- throwing in the high-90s this spring -- will be his closer. He chose Wood over the younger and more rubber-armed Carlos Marmol because the closer's role tends to be one where you can monitor usage and plan warming a pitcher up accordingly. Marmol is better suited to be a setup man, because his young arm could get ready on a moment's notice, unlike Wood's surgically repaired wing. Consider Wood a 30-save closer now, but still keep Marmol in deeper Rotisserie leagues for his potential to fill in for saves and perhaps take over if Wood is hurt yet again.
Chuck James, SP, Atlanta
The Braves are leaning toward Jair Jurrjens as their No. 5 starter, which means James will open the year in the minors or on the DL. If Smoltz is not ready for the season, James could fill Smoltz's spot, but that doesn't look likely at this point. James was intriguing in Fantasy mostly because of his starting role for a solid contender with a decent offense, but we have to admit he is really not that great of an arm. It makes him relatively worthless in all leagues as a stashee.
Jair Jurrjens, SP, Atlanta
We have to admit our preseason projections on Jurrjens were far too low. He is an elite pitching prospect who is NL Rookie of the Year worthy. The Braves have one of the most underrated offenses in baseball and anyone getting starts for them will be intriguing in all leagues. Throw in the fact Jurrjens is a solid prospect with a big-time opportunity and, bingo! Super sleeper.
Chase Headley, OF/3B, San Diego
Yet another elite prospect who had a great spring, a la Longoria. It wasn't his bat that kept him from winning the left field job out of spring training, but instead the transition to left field from third base. He was demoted this weekend. After Kevin Kouzmanoff's great second half, Headley had to find a new position and apparently needs more work in the outfield in Triple-A to open the season. He has 20-homer potential and could be a must-add in all leagues when his call-up finally comes.
Joe Crede, 3B, Chicago White Sox
Crede has had a bad spring, but he apparently will still open the season as an everyday third baseman. The fact he is healthy enough to play is noteworthy in itself. There is pop in his bat, especially in that home-run hitter's ballpark in Chicago. That lineup is a lot better than you might give it credit for being, too. Crede has been overlooked in many deeper leagues, but you have to take notice now. He is, after all, slugging away for big dollars in a contract year.
Josh Fields, 3B, Chicago White Sox
It is not for the reason the Rays have on Longoria above, but Fields might be headed to Triple-A, too. That might even be more egregious in Fantasy circles than the unproven Longoria. Fields is a player who hit 23 homers in the majors last season -- in just over half a year -- and he has 15-to-20 steal potential to boot. Still hold on to Fields, though, because Crede could be traded on a dime and Fields will be right back where he belongs: starting at third for the White Sox.
Carlos Gomez, CF, Minnesota
Last but most certainly not least this week, Gomez has won the starting center field spot for the Twins. Rotisserie owners rejoice. We say it all the time, but MLB steals leader Jose Reyes says Gomez is even faster than he is. If Gomez can post even a .320 on-base percentage, he could steal 50 bases this season. In his prime, Gomez looks like he could develop into a Carl Crawford-like .280-20-80-100-60 player.

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