Here are the futures totals.
Most years I don't bother with this shit, because I hate futures bets. Don't have the patience.
But this year I might fire some. Here are my recommendations:
Dodgers over 103.5 - They won 100 last year despite a starting pitching staff which was one of their worst in decades. Seriously, look it up. All they've done since then has been add Shoehei Ohtani, Yoshi Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow, and Teoscar Hernandez. And all of last year's major contributors will be back, aside from Kershaw who will come in mid-year.
Atlanta over 101.5 - Another ploppy pick, but it's hard to see the Braves not beating this mark. The top 5 in their lineup are all in the top 22 ranked fantasy hitters in baseball, including #1 Acuna. Their #6 hitter is Michael Harris. Spencer Strider and Max Fried are back, and both healthy. They even picked up Chris Sale. Aside from the Dodgers, who in the NL is going to be a problem for them in the regular season? The only team in their division projected over .500 is the Phillies.
St. Louis under 85.5 - This is my favorite bet. How exactly have the 71-win Cardinals improved? By signing a gaggle of ancient starting pitchers? Nolan Arenado and Paul Goldschmidt are not the offensive forces they once were. They're starting the season without Lars Nootbaar and Tommy Edman. The bullpen isn't particularly good, and the team is expected to be slow on the basepaths in an era where SB are way up. This is not going to be a winning team.
Cubs over 83.5 - This is a team which was sometimes great and sometimes terrible last year. But I think they should do better than 83 wins. The lineup is fairly solid, and the starting pitching may be better than you think. Justin Steele looks great, Shota Imanaga will probably be solid, and you might get some surprising performances out of Jordan Wicks and Hayden Wesneski. It also helps that they're in a division without any dominant team, so they'll be playing fewer games against the Dodgers and Braves.
Reds over 82.5 - My second favorite bet. The Reds have a pretty exciting lineup of youngsters, between TJ Friedl, Elly De La Cruz, Matt McClain, Christian Encarnacion-Strand, and Spencer Steer. They can afford to wait out the suspension of Noelvi Marte. The starting pitching will hold them back, as only Hunter Greene really has a lot of talent, but their lineup should be good enough to compete for the division. I actually think they win the NL Central.
Diamondbacks over 83.5 - The lineup is decent, and the starting pitching featuring Zac Gallen, Merrill Kelley, Eduardo Rodriguez, and the possible breaking out Brandon Pfaadt should make them much better than a .500-ish club. They are riding the momentum from last year's exciting postseason. While they won't challenge the Dodgers for the NL West title, they should pull up into second, and probably finish in the high 80s.
Angels under 72.5 - So, aside from the oft-injured Trout, what's left? Anthony Rendon, who has admitted he's essentially given up? Taylor Ward? Brandon Drury? Only one member of the lineup is projected to steal more than 8 bases, nobody is projected to hit over .264, and nobody except Trout is projected to hit over 25 HR. But the real story is the starting pitching. I don't see Reid Detmers, Griffin Canning, Patrick Sandoval, Tyler Anderson, and Chase Silseth putting up big numbers. Plus they're in a division with the Astros, Rangers, and Mariners. I project something like 69 wins for this squad.