We’ve got a dreamy 14-game main slate on tap tonight with no game in Colorado. Below are some stack options to consider for the slate.

New York Mets

The Mets host the Angels tonight with Ricky Nolasco taking the hill for the Halos. Nolasco has a stack-friendly mix of hard contact allowed and fly ball tendencies. He has the third lowest GB/FB ratio and fourth highest hard contact rate of any pitcher in action tonight.

He also has the stack friendly quality of struggling with same-handed hitting, meaning you don’t have to focus purely on hitters with the platoon advantage. Against right-handed hitters between this year and last, Nolasco has allowed a 35.8 percent hard contact rate and 1.85 HR/9.

This game is in New York which isn’t an extremely favorable hitters park or anything, but it is ranked middle-of-the-pack in ESPN’s Run Park Factor last season. It’s also a much better park for hitters than Nolasco’s home park would be. It is going to be a warmer-than-normal 82 degrees in Queens at game time, which makes the park play up a bit for hitters tonight.

Michael Conforto has the best career numbers vs. RHP of any Met with a significant sample size with a 134 wRC+. He has been hitting the ball well lately with a .366 wOBA in the last 14 days. Neil Walker has been New York’s best hitter the last two weeks with a wOBA of .430. He owns a career wRC+ of 120 vs. RHP.

Conforto tends to lead off against right-handed starters while Walker usually hits fourth. Jay Bruce generally hits between them and owns a career ISO of .234 vs. RHP. Hopefully it will be Jose Reyes in the two-hole as he owns a career .424 wOBA against Nolasco with four home runs in 56 PA. Bruce also has good numbers against Nolasco with a .408 wOBA in 19 PA, and Walker has a .372 wOBA against him in 16 PA.

Arizona Diamondbacks

The D’Backs are getting a big negative park shift playing in San Diego instead of Arizona, but they’ll make up for it in matchup against the woeful Jered Weaver. Weaver is sporting a 6.05 ERA this season with an xFIP of 5.09. He’s also allowing an ungodly 3.02 home runs per nine innings. Woof!

Weaver is like Nolasco in that he also struggles with same-handed hitters. Between this year and last the right-handed Weaver has a .360 wOBA against lefties but an even worse .374 wOBA against righties. He has also been more fly ball friendly and has allowed harder contact to righties. That means hitters from both sides of the plate are well in play against Weaver, namely right-hander Paul Goldschmidt who has a career 138 wRC+ vs. RHP.

It should be noted that while the D’Backs are getting a negative park shift on the road, they have been an above average offense against right-handed pitching this season even after you adjust for their favorable home ball park. The D’Backs have a wRC+, which accounts for park factors, of 107 vs. RHP, which ranks seventh in the league.

Their best non-Goldschmidt hitters vs. RHP are lefties Jake Lamb and David Peralta who have career wOBAs of .355 and .372 vs. RHP, respectively. Peralta has not been starting recently for Arizona but has been pinch-hitting and is expected to make a return to the starting lineup tonight after an off-day yesterday for Arizona. When Peralta is in the lineup and Arizona faces a right-handed starter, Peralta-Goldy-Lamb tend to hit 2-3-4.

Hitting in front of that trio will likely be either Reymond Fuentes of Gregor Blanco as Arizona is currently without leadoff man A.J. Pollock. Either Fuentes of Blanco could provide some salary relief if included in an Arizona stack. Behind the trio will likely be Yasmany Tomas who will not have the platoon advantage and is much better with it. But he does still have some pop against righties with a career .180 ISO vs. RHP.

Los Angeles Dodgers

The Dodgers will host the Marlins tonight who will send Justin Nicolino to the hill. Nicolino is not like Nolasco or Weaver in that he’s good against same-handed hitters. He has only faced 100 lefties between this year and last, but he has a 59.3 percent ground ball rate against them and a hard contact rate of only 21.4 percent. But it’s a different story against righties.

Against 274 righties in the same time frame, Nicolino’s ground ball rate is only 41.4 percent, and his hard contact rate is 36.4 percent. Righties have a .356 wOBA against him, and he’s only striking them out at an 11 percent clip.

When you think Dodgers you tend to think of lefties with Corey Seager, Adrian Gonzalez, Joc Pederson and more recently Cody Bellinger. And switch-hitting catcher Yasmani Grandal is better from the left side. But LA can field a pretty solid right-handed heavy lineup against lefties.

The last two times LA has faced a left-handed starter, Chris Taylor has led off with Franklin Gutierrez and Kike Hernandez hitting in the top five. Those three have career wRC+s vs. LHP of 108, 129 and 132, respectively. Gutierrez and Hernandez could also be hitting up the order tonight a bit closer to Taylor if Justin Turner is unable to play tonight after leaving last night’s game early.

The same goes for catcher Austin Barnes who has started LA’s last two games against lefties and has a respectable .344 wOBA vs. LHP in his young career. Yasiel Puig could move up the order a spot as well, and he has a career .349 wOBA vs. LHP.

If Turner is out, the lineup might look something like Taylor-Seager-Gutierrez-Hernandez-Barnes-Puig. That would allow you to go righty-heavy with a top of the order stack against Nicolino.