
NHL Power Rankings: Each team’s best 2022-23 addition
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3 years agoon
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adminAs we cross the midway point of the season, we’ve graded all 32 teams, doled out midseason awards and made bold predictions for the second half. For this edition of the Power Rankings, let’s identify the best addition that every team made for 2022-23 — be it player or coach — based on what has transpired thus far.
How we rank: A panel of ESPN hockey commentators, analysts, reporters and editors rates teams against one another — taking into account game results, injuries and upcoming schedule — and those results are tabulated to produce the list featured here.
Note: Previous ranking for each team refers to the most recent edition, published Jan. 6. Points percentages are through Thursday’s games.
Previous ranking: 1
Points percentage: 82.93%
Next seven days: vs. TOR (Jan. 14), vs. PHI (Jan. 16), @ NYI (Jan. 18), @ NYR (Jan. 19)
Boston might have the redemption story of this season in coach Jim Montgomery. The Jack Adams favorite and first-year Bruins’ bench boss was fired by the Stars in December 2019 for “unprofessional conduct inconsistent with the core values and beliefs of the Dallas Stars and the National Hockey League.” In January 2020, Montgomery announced that he was checking into rehab for alcohol abuse. He was hired as an assistant with the Blues ahead of the 2020 season before working his way back into a head role with the Bruins. In Boston, he’s been pushing the right buttons — and being a coach guys love to play for — while turning the B’s into a juggernaut.
Previous ranking: 3
Points percentage: 68.60%
Next seven days: @ BOS (Jan. 14), vs. FLA (Jan. 17), vs. WPG (Jan. 19)
Toronto took a chance by trading for Matt Murray. That risk is paying off. Murray has been excellent playing in tandem with another offseason addition — Ilya Samsonov — to give the Leafs a desperately needed one-two punch in net. Murray’s not without flaws, but a .919 SV% and 2.48 GAA is pretty topflight.
Previous ranking: 2
Points percentage: 70.24%
Next seven days: vs. PIT (Jan. 14), vs. VAN (Jan. 15), vs. MIN (Jan. 19)
Carolina bolstered its blue line big time with Brent Burns. The 37-year-old carries almost 24 minutes per game (a Hurricanes’ high), quarterbacks the top power-play unit and is fourth on the team in scoring (28 points in 40 games). An ideal addition.
Previous ranking: 4
Points percentage: 67.44%
Next seven days: vs. EDM (Jan. 14), vs. DAL (Jan. 16), vs. DET (Jan. 19)
Vegas remains in the honeymoon phase with new head coach Bruce Cassidy. The Golden Knights believed they needed fresh voice, and Cassidy has provided it, pushing them atop the Pacific Division standings. He could be the Golden Knights’ missing piece, the change that moves them back to perennial postseason contenders after sitting home last postseason.
Previous ranking: 6
Points percentage: 67.07%
Next seven days: @ ANA (Jan. 13), @ LA (Jan. 14), @ SJ (Jan. 16), @ SEA (Jan. 19)
New Jersey needed major help in net, and it found it by trading for Vitek Vanecek. The former Washington Capital has shored up the Devils’ crease with a 16-5-2 record, .913 SV% and 2.37 GAA to rank among some of the NHL’s top goaltenders. Vanecek’s presence has been the difference-maker these Devils required to thrive.
Previous ranking: 7
Points percentage: 66.28%
Next seven days: vs. CGY (Jan. 14), @ VGK (Jan. 16), @ SJ (Jan. 18), @ LA (Jan. 19)
Dallas went after coach Pete DeBoer immediately after Vegas fired him last summer. It turned out to be the Stars’ best move. DeBoer has Dallas leading the Central Division following a season when it barely made the playoffs. There’s buy-in to DeBoer’s systems across the board, with the on-ice evidence apparent in the consistency Dallas shows offensively, defensively and on special teams.
Previous ranking: 12
Points percentage: 65.85%
Next seven days: @ CHI (Jan. 14), vs. TB (Jan. 16), @ EDM (Jan. 17), vs. NJ (Jan. 19)
Seattle had 10 games with Calder Trophy front-runner Matty Beniers last season, so its true top newbie has to be Andre Burakovsky. He signed with the Kraken as a free agent, and the big winger has fit in producing a team-high 35 points in 40 games (one more than the rookie Beniers). Seattle’s terrific season wouldn’t be progressing as is without both of their contributions.
Previous ranking: 8
Points percentage: 66.25%
Next seven days: @ STL (Jan. 14), @ SEA (Jan. 16), @ VAN (Jan. 18), @ EDM (Jan. 19)
Tampa Bay has tapped into a great rookie campaign from Nick Perbix. A sixth-round choice in 2017, Perbix played four years at St. Cloud State, then in the American Hockey League and successfully stepped into a top-four spot on the Lightning’s blue line. Tampa Bay, accordingly, wasted no time signing Perbix to a two-year extension this month.
Previous ranking: 5
Points percentage: 65.48%
Next seven days: @ PIT (Jan. 13), vs. ARI (Jan. 15), @ MTL (Jan. 17), @ TOR (Jan. 19)
Winnipeg has flown back into postseason contention under the guidance of first-year head coach Rick Bowness. Bowness didn’t hesitate to make changes, stripping Blake Wheeler of the captaincy and getting the Jets to execute a more defense-focused system. It’s been a good fit for Bowness and Winnipeg, and now the Jets are firmly among the league’s top teams.
Previous ranking: 9
Points percentage: 63.95%
Next seven days: vs. MTL (Jan. 15), @ CBJ (Jan. 16), vs. BOS (Jan. 19)
New York’s tangled history with Jimmy Vesey hasn’t diminished his impact this season. Vesey’s second run with the Rangers — who originally signed him as a college free agent in 2016 and then brought him back as a UFA in September — has been surprisingly positive. The 29-year-old winger is solid defensively and chips in up front (14 points in 40 games), earning himself a two-year extension. Not bad at all.
Previous ranking: 14
Points percentage: 62.22%
Next seven days: vs. NJ (Jan. 14), vs. DAL (Jan. 19)
Los Angeles took Kevin Fiala off Minnesota’s hands last summer via trade. What a move. Fiala subsequently signed a seven-year deal with the Kings and now paces the team in goals (15) and points (46) through 45 games. Amid an up-and-down season for L.A. in other respects, Fiala has delivered the desired consistency.
Previous ranking: 13
Points percentage: 60.00%
Next seven days: vs. WPG (Jan. 13), @ CAR (Jan. 14), vs. ANA (Jan. 16), @ OTT (Jan. 18)
Pittsburgh would be in a serious bind without Jan Rutta. The two-time Stanley Cup champion inked a three-year deal with the Penguins in July to bolster their blue-line group. Rutta’s practically running it now amid Pittsburgh’s swath of injuries. More minutes and responsibility are no problem for Rutta, who “gives us everything,” according to coach Mike Sullivan.
Previous ranking: 11
Points percentage: 59.09%
Next seven days: vs. PHI (Jan. 14), @ NYI (Jan. 16), vs. MIN (Jan. 17), @ ARI (Jan. 19)
Washington signed Stanley Cup champ and free agent Darcy Kuemper, and he’s delivered in D.C. When healthy, Kuemper has produced a 12-10-4 record, .919 SV% and 2.52 GAA. Staying available will be key for Kuemper in the second half to keep Washington rolling.
Previous ranking: 10
Points percentage: 60.98%
Next seven days: vs. ARI (Jan. 14), @ WSH (Jan. 17), @ CAR (Jan. 19)
Minnesota’s quiet offseason was punctuated by Sam Steel signing a one-year, $825,000 free agent contract in late August. Fast-forward to Steel emerging as the Wild’s top line center, hitting a career high in goals (seven) through 40 games and being on pace to have his best season ever. And he’s only 24. That’s a serious return on Minnesota’s investment.
Previous ranking: 15
Points percentage: 53.75%
Next seven days: vs. OTT (Jan. 14), vs. DET (Jan. 16), @ CGY (Jan. 18)
Colorado adding Alexandar Georgiev had the desired effect of seamlessly replacing former No. 1 goaltender Kuemper. In a season fraught with injuries throughout the Avalanche lineup, Georgiev’s stable play (.915 SV%, 2.75 GAA) has kept netminding from being another major concern.
Previous ranking: 20
Points percentage: 54.65%
Next seven days: @ SJ (Jan. 13), @ VGK (Jan. 14), vs. SEA (Jan. 17), vs. TB (Jan. 19)
Edmonton brought Mattias Janmark in on a one-year deal to add offensive depth, which was swiftly required after an early-season injury to Evander Kane. Janmark has carved out a meaningful role for the Oilers since, clocking solid minutes at 5-on-5 and leading all forwards in short-handed minutes per game. He should remain in a prominent role even after Kane returns.
Previous ranking: 17
Points percentage: 54.65%
Next seven days: vs. MTL (Jan. 14), vs. WSH (Jan. 16), vs. BOS (Jan. 18), @ BUF (Jan. 19)
New York made its biggest change behind the bench, replacing Barry Trotz with Lane Lambert. It was a curious move but one that, so far, appears to be panning out. The Islanders are a playoff-caliber group again, producing more offense in the Lambert era than when he was Trotz’ assistant. Lambert isn’t afraid to hold his team accountable either, which bodes well for continued success even though inevitable struggles are expected ahead.
Previous ranking: 21
Points percentage: 53.66%
Next seven days: vs. BUF (Jan. 14), vs. CGY (Jan. 16), vs. CBJ (Jan. 17), @ STL (Jan. 19)
Nashville’s struggle for offense would be even more pronounced without Nino Niederreiter‘s contributions. Carolina left Niederreiter on the open market last summer and since joining the Predators, he’s emerged as a top performer, checking in at second on the team in goals (12) and fifth in points (22). Nashville could use more producers like him.
Previous ranking: 16
Points percentage: 52.50%
Next seven days: @ NSH (Jan. 14), vs. FLA (Jan. 16), @ CHI (Jan. 17), vs. NYI (Jan. 19)
Buffalo eased Owen Power onto the NHL scene (technically, he already appeared in two games last season) and the rookie responded well in the first half of the season. Power hasn’t lit the lamp yet, but he’s a solid defender in the Sabres’ top four, bringing a mix of skill, speed and grinding play that’ll wear down opponents.
Previous ranking: 18
Points percentage: 56.98%
Next seven days: @ DAL (Jan. 14), @ NSH (Jan. 16), vs. COL (Jan. 18)
Calgary targeted Nazem Kadri for a reason — and the forward has been on fire for the Flames. He’s a top-six skater who punches up the power play and brings his signature blend of skill and spice at even strength. Scoring 16 goals and 32 points in 42 games is a nice return, too.
Previous ranking: 23
Points percentage: 48.84%
Next seven days: vs. VAN (Jan. 14), @ BUF (Jan. 16), @ TOR (Jan. 17), @ MTL (Jan. 19)
Florida’s answer to “best thing that’s happened in the last six months” always seems to be: Matthew Tkachuk. Why fight it? He’s an All-Star forward who gives the Panthers effort, skill, physicality and a commanding on-ice presence. Blockbuster trades don’t go over much better than this one has for Florida.
Previous ranking: 22
Points percentage: 52.33%
Next seven days: vs. TB (Jan. 14), vs. OTT (Jan. 16), vs. NSH (Jan. 19)
St. Louis was a perfect match for Noel Acciari. The veteran center settled into a bottom-six slot from which he’s now on pace to produce his best totals in years (Acciari was already at nine goals and 16 points through 42 games). He also leads the Blues in hits and all St. Louis forwards in blocks. That’s the epitome of St. Louis hockey.
Previous ranking: 19
Points percentage: 53.75%
Next seven days: vs. CBJ (Jan. 14), @ COL (Jan. 16), @ ARI (Jan. 17), @ VGK (Jan. 19)
Detroit would be in trouble if not for Ville Husso. The new No. 1 netminder — acquired via trade with St. Louis last July — has been solid for the Red Wings at 13-8-5, with a .901 SV% and 3.03 GAA. Other newcomers like Dominik Kubalik have also provided Detroit with healthy returns, but it’s Husso’s addition the Red Wings will continue to benefit most from moving forward.
Previous ranking: 27
Points percentage: 48.81%
Next seven days: @ WSH (Jan. 14), @ BOS (Jan. 16), vs. ANA (Jan. 17), vs. CHI (Jan. 19)
Philadelphia can’t deny the impact that Tony DeAngelo has had on their blue line — even if coach John Tortorella did bench him during a subpar performance against Toronto. Overall, DeAngelo’s pairing with Travis Sanheim has clicked. DeAngelo is fourth on the team in points (23 through 36 games), and he munches on minutes (23:34 per game). That’s encouraging.
Previous ranking: 24
Points percentage: 50.00%
Next seven days: @ COL (Jan. 14), @ STL (Jan. 16), vs. PIT (Jan. 18)
Ottawa hit a home run signing Claude Giroux. His addition has paid dividends, even if the Senators aren’t climbing up the Atlantic standings as hoped. Giroux is elevating Ottawa’s current — and future — stars Brady Tkachuk and Tim Stutzle on the Senators’ top line, and generating excellent output himself with 15 goals and 36 points in 40 games. At 34, Giroux can still keep up with the kids.
Previous ranking: 26
Points percentage: 44.05%
Next seven days: @ NYI (Jan. 14), @ NYR (Jan. 15), vs. WPG (Jan. 17), vs. FLA (Jan. 19)
Montreal has a Cinderella story of sorts in Arber Xhekaj. He’s a 21-year-old undrafted defender who’s brought skill, physicality, personality and some fighting edge to the Canadiens’ ranks. Xhekaj’s five goals and 13 points ranked him fifth among the NHL’s defensive rookies, showing he’s no slouch on the scoresheet either.
Previous ranking: 25
Points percentage: 45.12%
Next seven days: @ FLA (Jan. 14), @ CAR (Jan. 15), vs. TB (Jan. 18)
Vancouver’s best surprise of the season continues to be Andrei Kuzmenko. He was an undrafted forward who came to the Canucks as a free agent last summer after years spent in the KHL. Through 39 NHL games, the rookie was second on his team in goals (17) and third in points (35). Now, can the Canucks extend Kuzmenko beyond his current one-year pact to keep the good times going?
Previous ranking: 30
Points percentage: 39.54%
Next seven days: vs. EDM (Jan. 13), vs. NJ (Jan. 16), vs. DAL (Jan. 18)
San Jose’s blue line is more than just Erik Karlsson — Matt Benning is on patrol there, too. The defender has been a productive addition to the Sharks’ back end, generating a career-high 17 assists and 18 total points through 41 games. His adept puck-moving ability might have been a pleasant surprise for San Jose.
Previous ranking: 29
Points percentage: 37.80%
Next seven days: @ MIN (Jan. 14), @ WPG (Jan. 15), vs. DET (Jan. 17), vs. WSH (Jan. 19)
Arizona is getting plenty out of veteran Nick Bjugstad. He’s been able to play everywhere — and with anyone — in the lineup, including alongside rookies Dylan Guenther and Matias Maccelli. Bjugstad has taken advantage of his opportunity as a player (with 10 goals and 17 points through 40 games) and a mentor, which is good business for all.
Previous ranking: 28
Points percentage: 31.71%
Next seven days: @ DET (Jan. 14), vs. NYR (Jan. 16), @ NSH (Jan. 17), vs. ANA (Jan. 19)
Columbus pumped the most it could out of Johnny Gaudreau in what has been a difficult season. Gaudreau’s first-season performance includes leading the Blue Jackets in points (38 through 40 games) and being an expectedly key piece of the power play. Lately, Gaudreau’s production has slowed in reduced minutes from coach Brad Larsen, who believes there is even more Gaudreau can give. There’s little doubt he’ll try.
Previous ranking: 31
Points percentage: 33.33%
Next seven days: vs. NJ (Jan. 13), @ PIT (Jan. 16), @ PHI (Jan. 17), @ CBJ (Jan. 19)
Anaheim has a surging rookie on its hands in Mason McTavish. The Ducks may ultimately be eyeing a draft lottery win (and Connor Bedard from there) but for now, McTavish is doing more than enough to satisfy Anaheim’s rookie quota. His 26 points in 41 games was third on the club and only seven back of Troy Terry for the team lead. That’s all the more impressive given McTavish’s slow start, too.
Previous ranking: 32
Points percentage: 32.50%
Next seven days: vs. SEA (Jan. 14), vs. BUF (Jan. 17), @ PHI (Jan. 19)
Chicago might not have expected Max Domi to emerge as its leading scorer when the Blackhawks signed him to a one-year deal, but Domi’s become that guy anyway. The veteran winger had 12 goals and 28 points in 39 games to prove he can still bring the heat offensively. That’s an energy the Blackhawks have needed with Patrick Kane on the sidelines recently.
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MLB Power Rankings: Red-hot Mariners, Padres heat up division races
Published
3 hours agoon
August 14, 2025By
admin
There are six weeks left in the 2025 MLB season, and after it seemed as if some of baseball’s top teams were running away with their divisions early on, we’ve seen those leads shrink to, in some cases, zero.
In the National League West, we’ve seen the Dodgers’ commanding lead be erased entirely, as the Padres now lead their rivals by one game atop the division — and with a series between the two coming up this weekend.
The same has happened in the American League West, with the Astros overtaking the Mariners earlier in the season and building a cushion atop the division, only to see that disappear as Seattle has won eight of its last 10 games to be just one game back from Houston.
Meanwhile, the Brewers have built a comfortable lead in the NL Central — and atop the majors, with the best record in all of baseball — after overtaking the Cubs late last month thanks to a number of winning streaks, including the current 12-game one.
Our expert panel has ranked every team based on a combination of what we’ve seen so far and what we already knew going into the 162-game marathon that is a full baseball season. We also asked ESPN MLB experts Buster Olney, Alden Gonzalez and Jesse Rogers to weigh in with an observation for all 30 teams.
Week 18 | Second-half preview | Preseason rankings
Record: 76-44
Previous ranking: 1
Sometimes there just aren’t enough words to describe how a team is doing what it is doing. It becomes less about talent — and, don’t get me wrong, Milwaukee is talented — and more about belief and confidence. The Brewers are riding that high right now, believing every time they step on the field, this is their game. But it still takes production to win, and during their latest win streak, Brice Turang and William Contreras have led them with big hit after big hit. Contreras has been playing top-level baseball over the past two weeks, hitting six home runs in the span of 12 games while Turang hit six in 11. Milwaukee looks unstoppable right now. — Rogers
Record: 69-51
Previous ranking: 2
Ranger Suarez has been dominant on the road this season but imploded against the Reds on Tuesday when he gave up 10 hits and six runs in 5⅓ innings. That game raised Philadelphia’s starting rotation ERA to over 4.00 since the All-Star break. It’s probably not much of a concern as the Phillies have more important days ahead of them, so getting Suarez, Zack Wheeler, Christopher Sanchez and Jesus Luzardo ready for the postseason should be No.1 on the team’s to-do list. A comfortable lead in the division will help that cause come September. — Rogers
Record: 70-51
Previous ranking: 6
As Shane Bieber finishes his minor league rehabilitation and prepares to join the Toronto rotation, manager John Schneider and his staff will have some choices. They could go to a six-man rotation, maybe temporarily, to give the team’s veteran starters a little extra rest in the last weeks of the season. Or they could shift someone to the bullpen. Lefty Eric Lauer has been a revelation for the Jays this year, posting a 3.36 ERA in 13 starts, but he has the most experience out of the ‘pen among the Toronto starters. — Olney
Record: 68-53
Previous ranking: 4
Brock Stewart, the Dodgers’ big deadline addition to the bullpen, is dealing with shoulder inflammation and was placed on the injured list Tuesday, where he joined five other high-leverage relievers. Manager Dave Roberts is once again short on options to hold leads late, but his offense has also been too inconsistent to routinely obtain leads in the first place. And oftentimes when the lineup produces, that day’s starting pitcher does not. The Dodgers have been a sub-.500 team since the start of July and can’t do much right these days, which might make this a really bad time for them to host the surging Padres this weekend. — Gonzalez
Record: 70-52
Previous ranking: 5
As the Tigers try to hold off Cleveland down the stretch, they will have to defend first place head-to-head. Six of Detroit’s final 12 games in the regular season are against the Guardians — at home Sept. 16-18, and in Cleveland Sept. 23-25. But according to FanGraphs, only three teams — the Yankees, Cubs and Dodgers — face a weaker schedule than the Tigers over the last quarter of the season. — Olney
Record: 67-54
Previous ranking: 11
The Mariners won their eighth consecutive game Tuesday night and moved into a first-place tie with Houston in the AL West — marking the first time since the start of June that they’ve held a share of the division lead. The Mariners, now a game back after Wednesday’s loss, have won nine of 11 since the front office made a multitude of win-now moves at the trade deadline and will spend these next six-plus weeks gunning for their first division title since 2001. They’ll get some additional help, too, with Bryce Miller rejoining the rotation soon and Victor Robles settling back atop the lineup shortly thereafter. The vibes in Seattle are on another level right now. — Gonzalez
Record: 68-51
Previous ranking: 3
Chicago might have to focus on a wild-card spot, as an offensive slump combined with the Brewers’ hot streak has tanked the Cubs’ percentages to win the division. The good news is the starting staff has kept them above water, ranking first in ERA since the All-Star break. But a power outage in the middle of the order is concerning. Kyle Tucker, who might still be feeling the aftereffects of a jammed finger suffered on June 1, has just a handful of extra-base hits since the calendar turned to July. The power lull has seemingly infected everyone in the lineup — outside of rookie Matt Shaw. — Rogers
Record: 69-52
Previous ranking: 8
Michael King made his long-awaited return to the Padres’ rotation Friday, and though it resulted in an ineffective, two-inning outing, the fact that he was there in the first place was a major development for a Padres team that seems to be rounding into the best version of itself for the season’s stretch run. The lineup — bolstered by the additions of Ramon Laureano, Ryan O’Hearn and Freddy Fermin — once again looks deep. The bullpen, fortified by the addition of Mason Miller, is one of the game’s best. The rotation is as close to whole as it has been all year. And now the Padres are poised to take down the Dodgers in the NL West. — Gonzalez
Record: 68-53
Previous ranking: 10
The Astros find themselves in a tight division race with the surging Mariners and will have to try to fend Seattle off, at least in the near term, without their star closer, Josh Hader, who landed on the IL on Tuesday with what the team described as a shoulder strain. The Astros still don’t know the severity of the injury, but manager Joe Espada called it a “punch to the gut.” Hader converted his first 25 save chances this season and sports a 2.05 ERA, with 76 strikeouts in 52⅔ innings. Bryan Abreu can be a capable closer in the meantime, but Hader’s absence significantly weakens the entirety of the bullpen. — Gonzalez
Record: 66-56
Previous ranking: 9
It seems appropriate that Roman Anthony wears No. 19 for the Red Sox, since his immediate impact is similar to the work of another Red Sox player who wore No. 19: Fred Lynn, the 1975 Rookie of the Year and MVP. Anthony has a 135 OPS+ with an on-base percentage of .399 in 53 games, and, like Lynn in his rookie season, Anthony has quickly become a core piece of Boston’s offense. — Olney
Record: 64-55
Previous ranking: 7
A collective slump at the plate since late July has been maddening for New York, although Pete Alonso setting the franchise record for home runs was a recent bright spot. Maybe the Mets will look back at their 13-5 win over Atlanta on Tuesday — when Alonso set the mark — as a turning point.
Right now, you could throw a dart at their roster and you’ll probably hit a player who is struggling at the plate. That does actually include Alonso, who has an OBP under .250 since the All-Star break. Francisco Lindor might be the most frustrated of the group as he’s hitting .188 over his last 23 games. As he and Alonso go, so do the Mets. They’re too good to continue on the pace they were on before Tuesday. — Rogers
Record: 64-57
Previous ranking: 12
Some of New York’s trade deadline acquisitions started out their Yankees campaigns infamously, with that ugly game in Miami. But in the past eight days, reliever David Bednar has provided some stability for the bullpen, twice making five-out appearances while striking out 12 in seven innings over that span. Manager Aaron Boone has more to figure out about his bullpen, but he seems to have settled on a closer. — Olney
Record: 64-58
Previous ranking: 14
A starting staff that ranks fourth in the NL in ERA got a boost with the return of Hunter Greene from injury. Could that be the difference-maker Cincinnati needs to make a playoff push? It might be a moot point if the Reds don’t hit enough. Every few games, they show signs of being capable of a potent offense, but then they revert to lower-scoring days, as they did last week in losing three games while scoring a total of just three runs. Miguel Andujar came up big over the past seven days, compiling an OPS over 1.300. The Reds need more contributions like that. — Rogers
Record: 62-57
Previous ranking: 15
Cleveland has won 21 of its past 30 games, thriving through a period in which it lost closer Emmanuel Clase to a leave of absence related to a gambling investigation; traded Shane Bieber, who had been expected to join the Cleveland rotation down the stretch; and listened to offers for Steven Kwan. The Guardians’ improbable surge is reminiscent of that of the 2024 Tigers. — Olney
Record: 61-61
Previous ranking: 13
The Rangers won their second consecutive game against the Yankees on Aug. 5, at which point they stood just a half-game back of a playoff spot. It seemed then as if the 2023 World Series champs — a team that has spent most of the time since searching for some consistent offense — were finally poised to make their move. Then Texas slipped once more, getting swept at home by the Phillies and totaling just seven runs over the course of a four-game losing streak. The Rangers are running out of time to showcase the consistent baseball they still believe they’re capable of. — Gonzalez
Record: 61-61
Previous ranking: 19
Is this the real Jordan Walker? Has he finally arrived? OK, that might be over the top for a .233 hitter, but he has been on a nice run since the All-Star break, hitting around .300, though with just one home run. More recently, he had an 8-for-16 stretch that included back-to-back three-hit games. His development is part of the Cardinals’ big picture strategy for the season, which has been all about allowing their young players to succeed or fail without looking over their collective shoulders too much. Outside of going on the IL due to appendicitis, Walker has had that opportunity. Could 2026 finally be the year for the 23-year-old? Stay tuned. — Rogers
Record: 59-62
Previous ranking: 16
The Giants haven’t had a winning month since April. At this point, they’re clearly playing for next year. With that in mind, though, perhaps Rafael Devers, the mid-June acquisition that was supposed to catapult them to the top of the NL West, is finally starting to figure out Oracle Park and get back to who he is. After slashing just .230/.337/.368 in July, Devers is slashing .267/.389/.556 in his first 12 games of August. Giants manager Bob Melvin told reporters Devers is “taking more balanced swings, a little more fluid,” a result, Melvin thinks, of no longer trying to do too much. — Gonzalez
Record: 60-61
Previous ranking: 18
On the day that Kansas City acquired Adam Frazier, one rival evaluator was confused by the move, citing Frazier’s struggles in Pittsburgh, where he hit .255 with a .318 OBP. But the Royals got Frazier in part because of his stabilizing influence in the clubhouse, and he has played well for Kansas City so far, hitting over .300 and helping to spur an offense that has been significantly better of late. In the first half of the season, the Royals ranked 29th of 30 teams in runs scored; since the All-Star break, they rank sixth. — Olney
Record: 59-63
Previous ranking: 17
Tampa Bay has an excellent track record for flipping proven talent and developing the young players they acquire in return. However, that has not been the case for Christopher Morel, who has had a disappointing season with a minus-0.6 WAR. Morel, who came to the Rays from the Cubs last year in the swap for Isaac Paredes, has 18 walks and 88 strikeouts in 241 plate appearances in 2025. — Olney
Record: 58-62
Previous ranking: 20
Miami’s chances at making a wild-card run took a hit last week when it batted .218 as a team with two home runs over a span of six games. The Marlins lost five of them, including a crushing doubleheader sweep by the Braves over the weekend. Game 2 was the killer, as the Marlins led 4-0 before falling 8-6. In those six games, Kyle Stowers went 2-for-21 (.095) as Miami ranked 27th in OPS for the week. It helped drop them further behind the other NL wild-card teams. — Rogers
Record: 59-62
Previous ranking: 21
Geraldo Perdomo has quietly been among the game’s best shortstops over the past four years, and now he’s in the midst of his best season. The switch-hitting 25-year-old boasts a .955 OPS since the start of July, putting his slash line up to .286/.386/.443 this season. Combine that with his typically solid defense and opportunistic baserunning, and Perdomo already compiled 4.7 FanGraphs WAR, ranked eighth among position players. It’s clear why the D-backs gave him a four-year, $45 million extension earlier this year — despite the presence of top prospect Jordan Lawlar. — Gonzalez
Record: 59-62
Previous ranking: 22
Zach Neto homered twice against the Dodgers on Monday, then turned a triple play against Shohei Ohtani in what amounted to a massive momentum shift in another Angels victory Tuesday. The latter, Neto said, was the highlight. It accounted for the first triple play of his life, and it came against one of the game’s best players. “It was pretty special,” said Neto, who was perfectly positioned to catch Ohtani’s line drive up the middle, then stepped on second base and fired to first, all in a matter of roughly three seconds. The Angels once again don’t have much to play for this season, but they completed a sweep of the Dodgers on Wednesday and finished 6-0 against their crosstown rivals this season. — Gonzalez
Record: 57-63
Previous ranking: 23
With the benefit of 20-20 hindsight, rival GMs believe that Minnesota was never actually open to the idea of trading right-hander Joe Ryan. With the Twins’ announcement that they’ll be adding new minority owners, there will be questions about whether Ryan can be locked down to a long-term deal, but even if that doesn’t happen, his trade value will continue to be sky-high, assuming he stays healthy, into the offseason. Cast against the landscape of a relatively thin free agent starting pitching class, he’d be in high demand from contenders. — Olney
Record: 54-66
Previous ranking: 24
A rival executive mused last week about Baltimore’s thin pitching and saturation of position player prospects. “The Orioles should have Garrett Crochet,” he said, noting how well Baltimore matched up with what the White Sox reportedly were looking for in a Crochet trade. This is just one what-if in a long list of what-ifs as the Orioles begin the process of building a pitching staff for 2026. — Olney
Record: 52-68
Previous ranking: 25
If the Braves are going to quickly return to contender status next season, they’ll need Spencer Strider at his best. That hasn’t been the case in his first season back after undergoing elbow surgery. Strider has given up 13 runs in 8⅔ innings this month after having an OK July where he threw two quality starts in five outings. We’ll see where his fastball velocity is next spring, but right now, it’s down 3 mph from 2022, 2 mph from 2023 and 1 mph from before his injury. Can he be successful at 95 mph rather than 98 mph? — Rogers
Record: 54-69
Previous ranking: 26
The A’s still have a lot of work to do to become competitive again, but their offense is legitimately promising. And one of the many reasons for that is Shea Langeliers, the 27-year-old catcher who slumped through the first two months of the season but has been one of the game’s best hitters in recent weeks. Since the All-Star break, Langeliers ranks second in the majors with a 1.227 OPS — just behind his teammate, Nick Kurtz, at 1.249 — and has accumulated 12 home runs, tied with Kyle Schwarber for tops in the sport. — Gonzalez
Record: 51-71
Previous ranking: 27
When will the misery end for Pirates fans? They’ve lost five in a row, including a Paul Skenes start in which Milwaukee beat them 14-0 on Tuesday. Pittsburgh’s problem is the same as it has always been: It can’t hit. Consider this: The Pirates have hit a major league-worst 86 home runs, which is 17 less than the Padres, who rank 29th. And it’s an astounding 105 home runs behind the Yankees, who lead MLB. Without more power next season, Pittsburgh will land right back where it is now … in last place in the division. — Rogers
Record: 44-77
Previous ranking: 28
The only member of the White Sox organization under contract for 2026 is Andrew Benintendi, for $17.1 million. Otherwise, moving forward, the White Sox have almost no payroll obligations. This made it easy for them to bet on the upside of Luis Robert Jr. and keep him through the deadline; presumably, they will pick up his $20 million option in the winter, and they’ll continue to hope that Robert’s potential fully manifests. — Olney
Record: 48-72
Previous ranking: 29
Somehow the Nationals do not have the worst ERA in baseball since the All-Star break despite looking horrendous on the mound. Their struggles there have affected every part of their pitching staff — MacKenzie Gore gave up eight runs in a recent start, Jake Irvin gave up six and Mitchell Parker gave up five. Washington feels like it’s playing out the string on the mound as the staff has given up 80 runs in eight losses this month. The team needs some overhauling in the offseason, starting with a new general manager and manager. — Rogers
Record: 32-88
Previous ranking: 30
August is only 14 days old and it already includes an eight-game losing streak for the Rockies. The Rockies have suffered through five eight-game losing streaks this season. Their run differential is a whopping minus-326, more than double that of the second-worst team (the Nationals at minus-148). And of their remaining 13 series, seven will come against teams that will likely be in the playoffs this year, including three against the Dodgers and Padres. With a little more than six weeks remaining, the Rockies are on pace for 119 losses, two shy of the modern-day record set by the 2024 White Sox. It’s going to be close. — Gonzalez
Sports
Marte hits clutch HR again, from other side of plate
Published
3 hours agoon
August 14, 2025By
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Associated Press
Aug 13, 2025, 08:01 PM ET
ARLINGTON, Texas — Ketel Marte went deep for the Arizona lead with two outs in the ninth inning again against the Texas Rangers. The big swing this time came from the other side of the plate.
Martel’s three-run homer batting left-handed capped a two-out rally in the ninth inning for the Diamondbacks in their series finale at Texas on Wednesday, a 6-4 win that came less than 24 hours after the switch-hitter’s upper-deck solo shot from the right side in the final at-bat for a 3-2 victory.
“He’s one of a kind. He’s just a special player. When his timing’s right and his body’s right, he’s capable of carrying a ball club,” manager Torey Lovullo said after the All-Star second baseman’s latest game winner. “And it was a great moment for him. The smile on his face as he was rounding the bases is something that I know we all enjoyed.”
The 413-foot homer to right was Marte’s fourth hit Wednesday.
His first three hits were singles, one driving in their first run, off former teammate Merrill Kelly, who made his third start for the Rangers since they acquired him from Arizona at the trade deadline two weeks ago.
“What you saw today is him in a nutshell. He hits good pitches, he hits bad pitches,” said Kelly, who exited the game after six innings with a 3-2 lead. “He can work the count, he could work the AB and punch a single into left or hurt you with a big-time homer from either side of the plate. Obviously, he proved that the last two nights. He’s kind of the guy that you circle in that lineup that you don’t want to beat you. … Unfortunately, we let him beat us the last two days.”
Marte’s solo homer with two outs in the ninth Tuesday night, on a two-strike 79.8 mph sweeper thrown by Danny Coulombe, went 445 feet.
In the series finale, Phil Maton had entered with two outs in the bottom of the eighth and struck out the first three batters he faced on nine pitches. James McCann then homered with two outs in the ninth, No. 9 batter Blaze Alexander was hit by a pitch and Geraldo Perdomo walked on four pitches before Marte went deep on a 76.4 mph curveball.
Marte is hitting .297 with 23 homers and 54 RBIs in 88 games, and has an NL-best .329 batting average in road games after going 6-for-9 the last two games in Texas. He missed nearly a month early in the season with a left hamstring strain.
“I’m feeling good. My body is good, I’m healthy,” Marte said.
“He can take it to a whole new level like, you know, a league above the major leagues, and that’s hard to do. There’s only a few players who can do that,” Lovullo said. “Everything happened kind of in order to lead up to that moment. He didn’t let us down. … This was a team moment, and Marte made it all happen.”
Gallen allowed two runs over five innings in his 161st start for the Dbacks, one fewer than Kelly made during their time together. Gallen’s 61 wins with Arizona are one shy of matching Kelly for the third-most in team history.
Kelly, a 36-year-old right-hander who spent 7½ seasons with the Diamondbacks, struck out five over six innings in his first start against them.
“It was cool. I’m glad it’s over, but it was fun just seeing the guys in the box,” Kelly said. “It’s obviously a very different vantage point that I’m used to seeing them from the dugout. But kind of what I expected, a little anxiety to begin leading up to the game. But once the game starts, it’s still executing baseball as usual.”
Sports
Mets promoting prospect McLean to boost rotation
Published
3 hours agoon
August 14, 2025By
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ESPN News Services
Aug 13, 2025, 06:48 PM ET
NEW YORK — Pitching prospect Nolan McLean will make his major league debut Saturday for the New York Mets, who are hoping the right-hander can provide a boost to a struggling rotation.
McLean, 24, is ranked as the No. 3 prospect in the Mets’ farm system by ESPN. He went 8-5 with a 2.45 ERA in 21 games, including 18 starts, between Double-A Binghamton and Triple-A Syracuse.
He struck out 127 batters in 113 2/3 innings with a five-pitch arsenal that includes a mid-to-high 90s fastball as well as a sweeper that’s been clocked in the mid-80s.
“We feel good with him going out there and giving us a chance to win baseball games at the big league level,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. “Credit to him that he put himself in this position.”
Mendoza and swingman Paul Blackburn, who was recalled from Triple-A Syracuse on Wednesday to replace Justin Hagenman on the roster, both said they were impressed by McLean’s mound maturity.
“I was there in Jacksonville (for) his first start at Triple-A and his demeanor and his presence out there — really looked like he knew kind of what he wanted to do, what he was trying to do, how he was trying to set up guys,” Blackburn said. “I think that just kind of says a lot about somebody.”
McLean, who played for Oklahoma State, is the first member of the Mets’ 2023 draft class to reach the majors. He is taking the rotation spot of Frankie Montas, who was sent to the bullpen Tuesday after going 3-2 with a 6.38 ERA in his first eight games, including seven starts.
The Mets rotation ranks sixth in the majors with a 3.70 ERA, though their 591 inning are the fourth-fewest. David Peterson, the scheduled starter Wednesday night against the Atlanta Braves, is the only New York starter to pitch at least six innings in a start since June 7.
McLean, who last pitched for Syracuse on Sunday, has thrown at least six innings in nine starts this season. He reached at least 90 pitches seven times, most recently on Aug. 5.
“Every time you’re able to call up a prospect, whether it’s a position player or a pitcher, the expectations here is to help us win baseball games,” Mendoza said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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