Below are stacks to consider for Tuesday’s MLB DFS action.

The Chalk

Coors Field

As we so often do, we’ll start today’s stacks article with Coors Field. Coors is usually included because it’s a good idea to have some exposure to it in cash games, but there’s a chance Corrs could be GPP-friendly tonight. There is some weather that will need to be checked closer to lock, and if the weather is looking dicey, ownership rates will drop for Rockies and Mets, meaning they’ll have more GPP appeal. But if the radar looks fairly clean, it’ll be the typical cash-friendly situation.

Lefty Jason Vargas is slated to go for the Mets, so Colorado’s top right-handed bats, Nolan Arenado , Trevor Story and DJ LeMahieu , are in a good spot. Lefty Charlie Blackmon is also an option given his 124 wRC+ against same-handed pitching dating back to last season. A cheaper option is catcher Chris Iannetta who has a 106 wRC+ with the platoon advantage in that time frame.

Right-hander German Marquez will start for the Rox, and the Mets have six hitters who have been league average or better against righties this season. Brandon Nimmo leads the way with a whopping 199 wRC+ vs. RPH this season. He figures to be a popular play after his big night last night. Other Mets that have been above average against righties this season are Wilmer Flores , Asdrubal Cabrera , Todd Frazier and Michael Conforto .

Washington Nationals

Aside from the Rockies and Mets, the Nationals and Yankees are the only other teams with a projected run total higher than five runs per Vegas tonight. The Yanks are facing a pitcher with the fourth best xFIP on the season among tonight’s probables, but the Nats are facing the starter with the worst xFIP, David Hess . Hess has a paltry 13 percent strikeout rate and only a 15 percent soft contact rate generated, so he gets hit a lot and gets hit hard.

Six Nationals have been safely better than average against right-handed pitching with Adam Eaton leading the way with a 190 wRC+. Eaton has hits in six of last seven. Eaton is followed by Matt Adams (DTD), Howie Kendrick , Juan Soto , Bryce Harper and Anthony Rendón . There are plenty of options with which to build a Nats stack.

Not the Chalk

Cincinnati Reds

We mentioned that David Hess has the worst xFIP among tonight’s starting pitchers this season, and that’s also true over the last 30 days. The only other starter who has been nearly as bad in that time frame is Matt Boyd with his 5.67 xFIP over his last five starts. Cincy will host Boyd and the Tigers this evening.

The Reds are swinging the bats well as they rank fifth in the league in wRC+ over the last 30 days behind only the Astros, Yankees, Dodgers and Angels. They have three hitters, Eugenio Suárez , Scooter Gennett and Joey Votto , who have all been more than 60 percent better than league average in that stretch. They have two others, Scott Schebler and Jesse Winker who have been at least 30 percent better than league average.

Suarez has easily been their best hitter against left-handed pitching dating back to last season, and Votto follows him as he does not struggle without the platoon advantage. Schebler and Gennett are both 10 percent better than league average dating back to last season. Adam Duvall hasn’t been as hot as his teammates recently, but he’s another good option to include in this stack as he leads the team in ISO against lefties in the same time frame.

Miami Marlins

This is what you call a contrarian pick as the Marlins have the third lowest projected run total in Vegas as of this writing. The two teams with lower projected run totals are facing Justin Verlander and Chris Sale , but the Marlins are only facing Dereck Rodriguez who is rocking a 4.70 ERA in three starts this season. He doesn’t exactly belong in any comparison to Verlander and Sale, so Vegas may be a bit conservative on Miami tonight.

The Marlins rank 18th in wRC+ over the last 30 days so they’re not completely inept at the moment. They also have four hitters who have a wRC+ of 118 or better against right-handed pitching this season, and those four typically hit in the first four spots in the order against right-handed starters. Those four are (in batting order) Derek Dietrich , Brian Anderson , J.T. Realmuto and Justin Bour . All four have been above average in the last 30, and Dietrich, Anderson and Realmuto have all been at least 30 percent better than average.