Below are stack options to consider for Friday’s 14-game main slate.

Los Angeles Dodgers

The Dodgers are getting a big positive park shift on the road tonight in Milwaukee. Using a three-year weighted average of ESPN’s Park Factors, Dodgers Stadium is average in the HR factor and well below average in the Runs factor. Miller Park, on the other hand, is slightly above average in the Runs factor and the third most homer-friendly park in the league.

The Dodgers have been very good against right-handed pitching this season with the fifth best park adjusted offense against righties with a wRC+ of 110.  Tonight, they’ll face right-hander Jimmy Nelson, who has solid numbers this season and especially in May, which makes the Dodgers a bit of a contrarian option even though they have the sixth highest expected total in Vegas.

Any Dodgers stack should center on their likely 2-3 hitters, Corey Seager and Yasmani Grandal. Seager has a 151 wRC+ vs. RHP dating back to last season, and the switch-hitting Grandal is better from the left side with a 128 wRC+ in that time frame.

It would be nice if Cody Bellinger and his .305 ISO against righties followed Seager/Grandal in the cleanup spot, but it’s more likely that Adrian Gonzalez hits there with Bellinger back in the six hole. You can use AGonz as a bridge to Bellinger, or, if he hits fifth, Chase Utley could be that bridge. Utley has been going well lately with a .433 wOBA in the last 14 days.

Cincinnati Reds

There are four teams with expected totals in Vegas of 4.94 or higher this morning with no other team having an expected total higher than 4.74. Two of those top four teams are Cincinnati and Atlanta who will face each other in Cincy. Using the weighted park factor, Cincy has been the fourth most homer-friendly park in the league over the last three seasons. If you’re looking for a game stack, this is it.

Of the two teams, Cincy is the preferred stack option. The Reds rank 10th in both wRC+ and ISO vs. RHP, and they’ll face right-hander Mike Foltynewicz tonight. Folty has always been a homer-prone pitcher, and this year has been no different. His career HR/9 is 1.51 and it is 1.60 this season. His career HR/FB rate is 13.6 percent and it is 17 percent this season. He has an especially tough time with lefties to whom he has allowed a 43.1 percent fly ball rate and 1.5 HR/9 dating back to last season.

Cincy’s two best lefties are Joey Votto and Scott Schebler. Votto has a 163 wRC+ vs. RHP dating back to last season, and Schebler has a .287 ISO against righties this season. Votto tends to hit third in the lineup while Schebler hits sixth. Hitting between them will likely be Adam Duvall and Eugenio Suarez. Suarez has been above average against righties this season, but, dating back to last season, Duvall has the better numbers against same-handed pitching. You could use one or both to bridge the Votto-Schebler gap. Zack Cozart is another right-hander who holds his own against righties, and he’s an option to add to the stack out of the two-hole.

If you’re going with a game stack and using Braves as well, Tyler Flowers, Nick Markakis and Matt Kemp are the Atlanta regulars with the best numbers against right-handers, as right-hander Bronson Arroyo will go for the Reds. Those three likely will hit 2-3-5 in the order, which is an acceptable stack, but they did hit 2-3-4 in Atlanta’s last game on Wednesday. If Brandon Phillips gets the start, he’s often in the mix somewhere in the top half of the order, and he’s at least average without the platoon advantage.

Here’s an example of what a Reds-Braves game stack might look like with not a ton of thought put into the pitcher selections.

Miami Marlins

You might not know this, but the Marlins have the second best wRC+ in the league against left-handed pitching. They rank 21st against right-handers, so they’re much more stackable against a lefty, and tonight they’ll get one in Patrick Corbin.

After not allowing more than three earned runs in six April starts, Corbin had a brutal May in which he allowed 26 earned runs in five starts for an ERA of 9.00. If there’s one defense of Corbin’s May it’s that three of his five starts were at home in Arizona’s hitter-friendly park, and his two road starts were in Colorado and Milwaukee. Miami is a pitcher’s park, but with the Marlins being as good as they are against lefties, this game may not turn out to be a respite for Corbin.

Miami’s best hitters against lefties are unquestionably Giancarlo Stanton and Marcell Ozuna who typically hit second and fourth in the lineup. Unfortunately, left-hander Christian Yelich hits between them and has below average numbers against lefties. But following Ozuna in the five hole is usually lefty Justin Bour who has a .374 wOBA vs. LHP in 70 PA between this year and last. Following Bour is usually catcher J.T. Realmuto who has a 104 wRC+ and a healthy .190 ISO vs. LHP dating back to last season.