2022 Fantasy Baseball Players with Multi-Position Eligibility

Published: Mar 30, 2022
With the 2022 MLB season just a week away, fantasy baseball drafts are kicking into high gear. Over the past three months, we've provided you with an array of 2022 fantasy baseball player rankings, player projections, articles that highlight things like your 2022 fantasy baseball sleepers and busts and, of course, different fantasy baseball draft strategies to employ. We've even mapped out your drafts with the Ultimate Fantasy Baseball Cheat Sheet.
But there is one draft strategy stone which seems to have been left unturned and that is a direct list of players who have multi-position eligibility in fantasy baseball. Drafting players like this not only help you maneuver through your draft with ease, but they will help you throughout the season, especially if your team gets bitten by the injury bug. Having the roster flexibility to move guys around throughout the year is huge, so we thought an all-in-one source would help you with your remaining drafts.
Fantasy Baseball Players with Multi-Position Eligibility
(20 games played minimum the previous season)
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Related Links:
- 2022 Projected MLB Lineups
- 2022 Projected MLB Starting Rotations
- 2022 Ultimate Fantasy Baseball Cheat Sheet
- 2022 Fantasy Baseball Closer Grid
- 2022 Fantasy Baseball Staff Mock Draft

Player News
Cubs re-signed RHP Caleb Kilian to a minor league contract.
The 27-year-old hurler was released last weekend after being designated for assignment, but after exploring the open market he has decided that a reunion with the Cubs made the most sense. Kilian will continue to function as extra rotation depth at Triple-A Iowa for the time being.
Corey Seager went 2-for-3 with a homer and a walk to help the Rangers take down the Angels 5-3 on Thursday.
Seager had a bad first week and a half while dealing with a calf strain, but he’s collected 14 hits, including three homers, in his last eight games, putting him at .306/.368/.516 overall. Alas, it’s produced just six RBI, mostly because the Rangers are getting terrible production from the ninth and first spots in the order.
Kumar Rocker recorded his first MLB victory after pitching seven innings of three-run ball and striking out eight Thursday against the Angels.
Rocker walked none and surrendered just one double and four singles. Unfortunately, all five hits came in the first and fifth innings, resulting in three runs between them. Still, Rocker was terrific in needing just 78 pitches to get 21 outs. It’s the kind of performance that suggests he might offer mixed-league value at some point. We just wouldn’t trust him quite yet. His next start will come in Sacramento against the A’s.
Robert Garcia picked up his first save of the year with a perfect ninth against the Angels on Thursday.
Garcia got the call tonight with Luke Jackson having pitched the previous two days and retired the Angels on five pitches. Even though he’s the better reliever of the two, he’ll likely resume taking a backseat to Jackson on Friday.
Jack Kochanowicz gave up four runs and eight hits in 4 2/3 innings against the Rangers on Thursday.
The surprising and misguided decision to pick Kochanowicz over Reid Detmers for a rotation spot at the end of the spring isn’t working out for the Angels. The team might reverse course soon, but Detmers hasn’t been used as a long guy and isn’t stretched out to start right away. Kochanowicz is now 1-2 with a 6.20 ERA, but at least he gets the Pirates next.
Joc Pederson went 0-for-4 with a strikeout Thursday, dropping his average to .060.
It’s mostly been hard grounders and routine flies from Pederson thus far, but given that his bat speed is unchanged from last year, we don’t have big concerns here yet. That said, this might not be the weekend he turns it around, given that the Rangers are set to face the Dodgers.