After dropping the single-category producer article late last week, you knew the multi-category contributors would get some love, too! In this article, we’re looking at fantasy baseball targets – no matter what the format is – that will help your rates and stats in multiple different areas. Yeah, sure, the likes of Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani, and Juan Soto are perfect fits for this article, but I don’t think I need to explain to anyone why it’s a good thing to draft those players. All the players in this article are drafted (as of now) outside of the top-75.

Geraldo Perdomo, Arizona Diamondbacks - Shortstop

Listing Geraldo Perdomo here really has nothing to do with home runs. The 20 homers feel very much like an aberration. From 2020-’24, he hit 14 home runs, and in 2025, he hit 20. His .424 xSLG is just 51st percentile last season.

Where Perdomo’s success should remain are multiple areas, including runs scored, driven in, batting average, on-base percentage, and bags stolen. He’s going to hit atop of a lineup flanked by Ketel Marte and Corbin Carroll, who are two of the better hitters in the league. 

Perdomo’s not a fast guy, but he’s an elite base runner, and we saw multiple players last season without elite speed swipe a bunch of bags, such as Perdomo and Josh Naylor. A switch-hitting shortstop who is always on base with elite hitters behind him is incredibly valuable.

Randy Arozarena, Seattle Mariners - Outfield

If we’re talking about a guy who’s helping in many facets of your fantasy baseball team, Randy Arozarena does the same stuff year over year. For five consecutive years, Arozarena has hit at least 20 homers and stolen 20 bases. He’s also had 70-plus runs scored in each season. He’s a career .344 OBP guy to add some sprinkles on top, too, which offsets his plummeting average over the past two seasons.

His health has played a big role in his continuance of fantasy goodness because he hasn’t played fewer than 140 games in five consecutive seasons. Availability and consistency are superpowers in sports, and Arozarena’s a great multi-category option.

Trevor Story, Boston Red Sox - Shortstop

Talent has never been the question when it comes to Trevor Story. It’s always been health-related. Since the 2022 season – his first year with Boston – he’s only played more than 94 games once, and it was last season. What happened last year?

  • 25 HR
  • 31 SB
  • 91 R
  • 96 RBI

Those types of numbers are what we were used to seeing from Story as a Rockie, and it feels like that was a lifetime ago. With Story slated to slot into the two-hole for Boston, he’s a legitimate 20-90-90-25 guy being drafted outside of the top-100.

Eugenio Suarez, Cincinnati Reds - Third Base

Entering his age-34 season, Eugenio Suarez returns to the Cincinnati Reds, a place he became very familiar with and had a lot of success at. Suarez has hit 49 home runs twice in his career, once last year and another in 2019 when he was with the Reds. 

What Suarez has brought to the table in each of the last two years is 30-plus homers, 90-plus runs, and 100+ RBI. He’s hit 30-plus home runs SIX times throughout his career and has driven in at least 90 runs in five different seasons.

Slotting into the heart of the Reds' lineup, and per Baseball Savant, Great American Ballpark was the fourth-best ballpark for right-handed hitters in terms of home runs.

Taylor Ward, Baltimore Orioles - Outfield

Obviously, the leap in terms of home runs for Taylor Ward was interesting, and we’ll see if he can repeat what he did last year, but man, it was a special season. If Ward is anywhere close to a 36-homer, 86 run scored, and 103 runs driven in guy, you can put up with his sub-.230 average.

Baltimore moved the wall back in left field, making it a little easier for power hitters, so we’ll see how guys like Pete Alonso and Taylor Ward fare as they both move to Camden Yards. Even if he takes a step back, Ward has a solid resume that can help you fill multiple roles in your fantasy lineup.

  • Three times he’s hit 23+ HR
  • Three times he’s scored 73+ R
  • Back-to-back 75+ RBI seasons

Almost every projection has Ward at MINIMUM being a 25-74-77 guy, and those are the floor of each site making projections. The ceilings are 30-84-94. Love Ward in the range he’s being selected, especially for the upside.

Noelvi Marte, Cincinnati Reds - Third Base, Outfield

It wasn’t a great 2025 campaign for Noelvi Marte, but his power-speed combination is worth taking a late-round shot on. In 90 games last year, Marte hit 14 home runs and stole 10 bases. He cut his strikeout rate by eight-percent from 2024 to 2025, and that’s a great sign moving forward.

Marte had 89th percentile sprint speed last season and has already had multiple 20-stolen-base campaigns at the minor league level, which shows you what his upside there is. He plays in one of the best ballparks in baseball and is in a vastly improved lineup heading into 2026.

On top of the speed, Marte’s prospect ranking showed 45/55 game power and 60-grade raw power. You’re drafting Noelvi Marte for the upside of being a 20-20 and possibly a 25-25 guy if he plays enough games.