
MLB Power Rankings: An NL battle for the top spot
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adminAfter the Rays’ downturn, it seemed as if the Braves would coast to the best record in baseball. But now, it’s not even a certainty that they’ll finish with the best record in the National League. The Dodgers have dominated in August, going 17-3.
Meanwhile, the Rangers are facing a similar dilemma in the American League — and within their own division, at that. After leading the AL West by as many as 6½ games in late June, Texas is locked in a tight three-way battle for the title with Houston and red-hot Seattle.
With so much change from week to week, it’s impossible to know how these races will play out, but it makes for exciting baseball!
Our expert panel has combined to rank every team in MLB 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 David Schoenfield, Bradford Doolittle, Jesse Rogers and Alden Gonzalez to weigh in with an observation for all 30 teams.
Week 20 | Second-half preview | Preseason rankings
Record: 82-44
Previous ranking: 1
Remember when Marcell Ozuna hit .085 in April? The DH started off slow, hit 14 home runs in May and June, scuffled a bit in July and is now heating up again, batting .363 with six home runs in August after hitting two home runs on Monday, one on Tuesday and and another on Wednesday, his 28th. That raised his season slugging percentage over .500 for the first time all season. The Braves are still trying to figure out the back of the rotation. Yonny Chirinos was placed on the injured list with elbow inflammation after recording a 9.27 ERA in five starts. Rookie Allan Winans was sent back to Triple-A with a 5.17 ERA in three starts as Jared Shuster was recalled, although Shuster will pitch out of the bullpen. Kyle Wright will begin a minor league rehab assignment with the hope that he’s able to return in late September. — Schoenfield
Record: 76-48
Previous ranking: 3
Tony Gonsolin, an All-Star last season, gave up 10 runs and recorded 10 outs against the Marlins on Saturday, then was placed on the IL with a forearm strain the following day. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Gonsolin is unlikely to pitch the rest of the year, yet another blow to a starting rotation that has faced its share of hurdles this season. Gonsolin had been pitching through what Roberts described as an “arm issue” for about a month, which seemed evident given his diminished fastball and the lack of bite on his breaking pitches. The Dodgers will rely on another one of their young arms to fill the role moving forward. But what they really need — for the postseason, specifically — is for Walker Buehler to make his way back from his second Tommy John surgery, and that is no certainty. — Gonzalez
Record: 78-48
Previous ranking: 2
The list of those who have made their MLB debuts for the Orioles over the past two years is staggering. Just to name a few: Adley Rutschman, Gunnar Henderson, DL Hall, Kyle Bradish, Felix Bautista (debuted in 2022), Colton Cowser, Grayson Rodriguez and Jordan Westburg (debuted this season). Through Tuesday, the Orioles had been credited with 33.1 bWAR as a team this season. The players listed here account for 13.4 of that total. And the Orioles’ system continues to be ranked at the top of the prospect ranking charts despite all the arrivals in the majors. In other words: Baltimore’s talent spigot is still open wide.
One player whose name could possibly be added to the list is the current top-ranked overall prospect, 19-year-old phenom Jackson Holliday. Baltimore GM Mike Elias told the media before the trade deadline he wouldn’t rule out calling up Holliday in September — and he reiterated that sentiment this week. Of course, “not ruling anything out” is different than saying, “We’re going to call him up.” If anything though, it underscores that the Orioles nailed yet another premium draft pick when they selected Holliday just over a year ago. So far in 2023, Holliday is hitting .334/.454/.529 across three levels and has .964 OPS over his first 26 outings in Double-A. It’s an exciting time to be an Orioles fan. — Doolittle
Record: 72-54
Previous ranking: 4
The sweep at home to the Brewers was particularly alarming for the Rangers as they had the schedule advantage after Milwaukee flew all night Thursday for the weekend series. The Brewers went on to outscore Texas 9-8 in that first game and 21-11 overall in the series. Freddy Peralta and Adrian Houser — the Brewers’ No. 3 and 4 pitchers — held Texas to just three runs in the final two games. The Rangers ranked 25th in OPS over a five-game span ending Tuesday, highlighting an unusually bad week at the plate. Their woes continued into the week with back-to-back losses to Arizona. Marcus Semien is among those who have struggled, striking out eight times in a five-game span while hitting just .217. Can Texas survive the charge by Houston and Seattle? It’s looking less and less likely. — Rogers
Record: 77-51
Previous ranking: 6
Between the Wander Franco investigation and all the major injuries, the news around the Rays has been dark in recent weeks. So it’s been perhaps easy to overlook the fact that, on the field, manager Kevin Cash’s crew has been trending upward. The nadir of the Rays’ season may have been July 29, when a 17-4 drubbing in Houston dropped them to a season-low .589 winning percentage. Since that date, the Rays have gone 14-7 and remained in position to chase down the Orioles in the AL East. With Franco away from the team, the Rays turned to 22-year-old Osleivis Basabe at shortstop and so far, he’s mashed. Basabe hit .303/.361/.485 in his first eight MLB games, including a grand slam off Colorado’s Daniel Bard for his first career homer. He also posted eight straight errorless games at shortstop. And so the Rays’ beat goes on. — Doolittle
Record: 72-56
Previous ranking: 5
The Astros have found themselves in the midst of what has suddenly become a three-team scramble for the AL West title because of a poorly-timed Rangers slump with a concurrent hot streak from the Mariners. However, the Astros’ up-and-down play has contributed to their inability to fully take advantage of Texas’ downturn. With the Blue Jays lurking behind the AL West trio in the overall league standings, none of them can take the postseason for granted, including October fixture Houston. The Astros have just one series left against each of their two primary division foes. Both are on the road: Houston has a three-game set at Texas from Sept. 4-6 and then at Seattle from Sept. 25-27.
After all their success in recent years, the Astros are certainly comfortable in high-stakes games. With a six-year streak of ALCS appearances on the line this season, chances are the AL’s other contenders would be just fine with the unlikely scenario in which Houston misses the postseason altogether. — Doolittle
Record: 71-56
Previous ranking: 10
Mariners fans have been waiting for Julio Rodriguez to heat up, but his recent stretch was an all-time heater: 17 hits over four games, never done before in the majors. Four straight games with at least four hits — done just once before. He went 4-for-6 and 5-for-5 against the Royals and then 4-for-5 and 4-for-6 against the Astros. He singled in his first at-bat of the next game, making him 18-for-23 over four-plus games — all Mariners victories. They’ve improbably moved into a wild-card spot while closing in on the Astros and slumping Rangers in the AL West. Rodriguez is hitting over .400 in August and raised his average from .251 at the beginning of the month to .278 after the four-game outburst. — Schoenfield
Record: 70-57
Previous ranking: 7
The Blue Jays dropped out of a wild-card slot this week even though they continue to play sound baseball. The immediate problem was the scorching Mariners stopped losing. The long-term problem for Toronto and the other playoff contenders is that there’s going to be a pretty good team left out of this postseason.
Toronto’s quest to avoid being that team was bolstered this week by the return of Bo Bichette from his knee injury. He made an immediate impact, collecting a single, scoring a run and making an outstanding clutch play on a ninth-inning grounder toward the hole at shortstop. Knock on wood: With Bichette back in the fold, the Blue Jays are pretty close to being full strength for the stretch run and that could be bolstered by the looming return of reliever Chad Green, who has been rehabbing in the minors. — Doolittle
Record: 69-58
Previous ranking: 8
The Phillies scored 45 runs over a six-game stretch with Bryce Harper leading the way, going 10-for-22 (.455) with four home runs and eight runs, including an inside-the-park home run, his first. J.T. Realmuto is also heating up, batting over .300 in August with an OPS near .900. Trea Turner has hit .343 with a 1.015 OPS in the 18 games since Phillies fans gave him a standing ovation on Aug. 4. “The last three, four weeks have been a lot better,” Turner said. “Normal me, I guess.” Turner had struggled for much of the season against fastballs — through Tuesday, his .676 OPS ranks 133rd out of 139 qualified hitters — but he had an OPS around 1.050 against them in that stretch. — Schoenfield
Record: 70-57
Previous ranking: 9
Milwaukee rebounded after getting swept by the Dodgers last week. Despite a tough travel schedule, the Brewers managed to sweep the Rangers and returned home to beat the Twins on Tuesday. Freddy Peralta is striking out batters at a productive rate, having whiffed 11 Rangers in his start over the weekend. He has 37 K’s in four August starts. But it’s the return of Brandon Woodruff who makes the Brewers really dangerous — now and potentially in October. Batters are hitting .183 off him since returning from injury. He’s building arm strength and could be at his best during the stretch run. — Rogers
Record: 67-60
Previous ranking: 14
While sweeping a weekend series at Yankee Stadium might not mean what it used to, the Red Sox looked like a club set to catch fire. But a dip against Houston proved to be a reality check — largely because of Boston’s wretched defense — five errors leading to five unearned runs and marring the first two games. The defense is hurting the club. Boston ranks last in the traditional measures of errors and fielding percentage. The Red Sox are also last in Statcast’s outs above average with a minus-53 figure through Tuesday. Second worst: Cincinnati at minus-22. — Doolittle
Record: 66-60
Previous ranking: 12
The Cubs have starting pitching concerns. Although it’s not the time of year to be experimenting, they may have to dip into the minors. Marcus Stroman remains out, while Drew Smyly has been ineffective — he gave up seven runs in 3⅔ innings to the Tigers on Tuesday. Dansby Swanson had a home run and four RBIs in that game, continuing a nice season. He has the highest OPS among all four free agent shortstops from last year’s class and he’s likely to win another gold glove. He could be the best signing of the group — for the least amount of money. — Rogers
Record: 66-61
Previous ranking: 18
The D-backs began August with a nine-game losing streak but have turned it around dramatically, winning nine times in 11 games, an encouraging sign for a relatively young team that was an aggressive slide. Their current four-game winning streak — against a Padres team that’s chasing them and a Rangers team that has been among the best in baseball all year — was especially uplifting. And Monday’s win offered a convenient encapsulation of these past few weeks. The D-backs found themselves down in the ninth and trailing again in the 11th but rallied both times, ending it with a walk-off double by Tommy Pham. Prior to their current 9-2 run, the D-backs had lost 25 of 32 games. “As you can see,” Pham said, “this team has a lot of heart.” — Gonzalez
Record: 65-62
Previous ranking: 13
Has there been more of a win-win trade in recent memory than the one in which the Twins sent Luis Arraez to the Marlins for Pablo Lopez and two minor-league hurlers? Arraez has been vital for the contending Marlins, and while he’d have to hit around .560 the rest of the way to reach .400, he’s still on track for the NL batting title. Meanwhile, Lopez has been solid for the Twins and has recently emerged as one of baseball’s hottest pitchers. Lopez won each of his first four starts in August while yielding a 0.36 ERA — one run allowed in 25 innings. He’s cracked the AL top 10 in ERA and tied with Toronto’s Kevin Gausman for the league lead in strikeouts entering Gausman’s start on Wednesday. If Lopez keeps this up, it’s not too late for him to enter the Cy Young conversation. — Doolittle
Record: 66-61
Previous ranking: 11
The Giants have a habit of graduating promising prospects to the major leagues this year, but none have come with the fanfare of their most recent one — Kyle Harrison, considered their most-hyped pitching prospect since a man named Madison Bumgarner. Harrison, a 22-year-old left-hander who stands 6-foot-2, was ranked 36th in Kiley McDaniel’s midseason list of top prospects. He battled command issues this year, which showed up in 48 walks in 65⅔ innings in Triple-A, but his stuff — most notably his power fastball — is elite. Harrison showed encouraging signs while recording 10 outs, half on strikeouts, against the Phillies on Tuesday. The Giants will give him a chance to join Logan Webb and Alex Cobb as the only traditional starters in their rotation. If that doesn’t work out, he could still be a crucial bullpen weapon down the stretch. — Gonzalez
Record: 67-61
Previous ranking: 16
A bad week at the plate can’t be what the doctor ordered for the already pitching shaky Reds. Cincinnati ranked last in OPS over a seven-day span ending Tuesday, hitting just .185. It didn’t help that Hunter Greene‘s long-awaited return went south pretty quickly. He gave up five home runs to the Blue Jays in Sunday’s 10-3 loss. With the latest news on injured lefty Nick Lodolo not very encouraging, Cincinnati’s second-half boost on the mound may never come. Greene will likely be better in subsequent starts and the offense is likely to return to form, but the Reds are in a fierce wild-card battle with more experienced teams. — Rogers
Record: 65-63
Previous ranking: 15
Jesus Luzardo snapped a recent skid — he had allowed 21 runs in 17 innings in his previous four starts — with six shutout innings against the Padres on Tuesday. He credited a pep talk earlier in the day from a friend back home to give him perspective. The big key: He threw more first-pitch strikes after falling behind too often in recent outings. Meanwhile, in his third start back from the minors after being sent down to save innings, Eury Perez was dominant with 10 K’s in six scoreless innings against the Dodgers (although David Robertson lost the game in the eighth). The Marlins haven’t really had Luzardo, Perez and Sandy Alcantara all clicking at the same time, but if that happens down the stretch, they can win a wild-card spot. — Schoenfield
Record: 61-67
Previous ranking: 19
When Tuesday began, the Giants had lost seven of their previous 10 and the Reds and Marlins had lost six of 10, meaning the Padres still found themselves 5½ games out of the final playoff spot in the NL. They were then shut out by the Marlins later that night, triggering boos from their fans. So the Padres’ mystifying season continues. Every time it seems as if they’re getting ready to go on a run, they stumble. Their longest winning streak all season has been three games (the Mariners, meanwhile, have had two eight-game winning streaks this month). What’s stunning is that it’s happened even though Fernando Tatis Jr., Juan Soto, Xander Bogaerts and Manny Machado have combined to play in more than 90% of their games, and their starting pitchers boast the second-lowest ERA in the majors. Mystifying indeed. — Gonzalez
Record: 61-67
Previous ranking: 20
The month of August has gone from bad to worse to, well, dark for the Angels. They lost both ends of a doubleheader to the Reds on Wednesday night, after which general manager Perry Minasian revealed that Mike Trout was going back on the IL because the fractured hamate bone is still a problem (he just returned from after a seven-week absence), and Shohei Ohtani would not pitch the rest of this season because of a tear in his ulnar collateral ligament.
Ohtani had a UCL sprain five years ago and ultimately underwent Tommy John surgery. That could be the course of action again — a procedure that would keep him off the mound for all of 2024 and severely impact his free agency, which was expected to net him a contract of at least $500 million. For now, though, Ohtani will seek second opinions. The Angels are 5-16 since deciding to keep Ohtani and go for it before the trade deadline. But now their concerns are bigger than immediate contention. — Gonzalez
Record: 60-66
Previous ranking: 21
Manager Terry Francona hinted at his possible retirement at the end of the season — no surprise, given his health problems in recent years. “This job is really hard,” he told reporters. “Not that it’s a bad job, it’s a great job, but it’s hard and the older you get or the more beat up you get, and sometimes it’s both.” Francona has won two World Series with the Red Sox, one AL pennant with Cleveland and is 13th on the all-time wins list. Every manager ahead of him on the wins list except the still-active Dusty Baker and Bruce Bochy is in the Hall of Fame, and Francona no doubt will land there. — Schoenfield
Record: 61-65
Previous ranking: 17
What can you really do with the Yankees at this point but highlight the horrific list of “first time since” events that have popped up daily. The big one is the losing streak, which has ended at nine games after a 9-1 win over Washington on Wednesday night. The Yankees had not lost nine straight since 1982.
As much as we’ve harped on the injury-battered starting rotation, the offense has been a bigger problem. To put it pointedly: The offense has gone completely missing, even with Aaron Judge returning to the lineup. Two weeks ago, we looked at the Yankees and thought it was conceivable that their 30-year streak of winning seasons could be in peril. At this point, it would be shocking if the streak continued. — Doolittle
Record: 59-69
Previous ranking: 22
Reports surfaced this week that the Mets and Brewers had discussed a deadline trade involving Pete Alonso, but Alonso was clear that won’t affect his feelings toward the organization. “Being a Met, it’s the only thing I know,” he said after Tuesday’s loss to the Braves. “I love being a Met. I take pride in putting on the jersey every day and representing the city of New York.” Alonso is eligible for free agency after the 2024 season, which means he could be on the trade block in the offseason if the Mets are indeed pointing more toward 2025 instead of next season. Alonso is hitting just .222 (he’s had some bad luck on balls in play with an expected batting average over .250), but he’s near the top of the NL in home runs and RBIs. — Schoenfield
Record: 58-69
Previous ranking: 26
With the Nationals playing much better than expected in a rebuilding year, the club announced a two-year extension for manager Dave Martinez — and are expected to announce a similar deal for general manager Mike Rizzo. “I love the process of what we are going through and watching them go out every day and do what they are doing has been a lot of fun,” Martinez said of his team. Meanwhile, outfielder Dylan Crews, the second pick in the 2023 draft, has been promoted to Double-A after hitting .355 with five home runs in 14 games in Class A. He went 1-for-1 with two walks, a hit by pitch and a sac fly in his Double-A debut. — Schoenfield
Record: 58-69
Previous ranking: 24
The Tigers’ future outfield configuration might have started to take shape this week with the promotion of center fielder Parker Meadows. Meadows, who collected a couple of hits with a triple and two runs scored in his second game after the call-up, is a touted defender and his arrival means that Riley Greene will likely spend more time in an outfield corner. Meadows is the younger brother of Austin, who has been away from the team since early May dealing with mental health issues. With Kerry Carpenter enjoying a strong second season, the outfield should emerge as an area of depth and strength for the Tigers. — Doolittle
Record: 56-72
Previous ranking: 23
Adam Wainwright might not win 200 career games after all. He has a month left to get there and if his last one is any indication, it might not happen. Wainwright had four starts in August and none came close to getting him to win No. 199. His ERA for those four outings was 14.73. There’s just no life left to his pitches, but with nothing else to play for, St. Louis is likely to give him every chance to still get there. On second thought, the Cardinals do have something to play for: avoiding last place. — Rogers
Record: 57-70
Previous ranking: 25
Pittsburgh already promoted top draft pick Paul Skenes to Double-A, putting him in line to possibly make his MLB debut sometime next year. And the Pirates need him, as their rotation ERA ranks near the bottom of the NL. Speaking of draft picks, their No.1 overall pick from 2021 has struggled recently, going just 9-for-57 in August. Henry Davis has seven walks and 19 strikeouts during that time frame with three extra base hits. But this is the time of year to see pitchers, get experience and turn those numbers around for when the calendar turns to 2024. — Rogers
Record: 48-78
Previous ranking: 28
Kris Bryant has played in only 107 of the Rockies’ 288 games since signing his mega contract in free agency last year, and there’s no defined date for when he’ll return from a fractured left index finger this year. When he does come back, there’s a chance he could do so as a first baseman. The Rockies are clearly entering a rebuilding phase and would ideally make room for some of their younger outfielders, namely Brenton Doyle and Nolan Jones. Bryant, at least, has shown versatility in his career. He just needs to be healthy. — Gonzalez
Record: 50-77
Previous ranking: 27
The shocking firings of top executives Kenny Williams and Rick Hahn overshadowed everything on the field for the White Sox over the past week. On top of it, there was a report the team could look into moving when its lease with Chicago is up in a half-decade. Safe to say, the organization is in turmoil and in need of stability. Considering the team’s timeline to replace Williams/Hahn, internal candidates are likely to emerge as favorites. Former player and current assistant GM, Chris Getz, has the inside track to take over. — Rogers
Record: 41-88
Previous ranking: 29
One area to address in the offseason: the bullpen. The Royals had a chance to win all four games last week against Seattle, but the bullpen faltered in all four games and allowed 14 runs in the eighth inning or later (the Royals did rally to win one of the games). On Monday, Dylan Coleman lost another game in the ninth, serving up a two-run home run — after hitting the first batter of the inning. The bullpen is last in the majors in win probability added and near the bottom in most other categories. The trades of Aroldis Chapman and Scott Barlow obviously thinned the ranks, but the pen ERA is over 5.50 the past three months. — Schoenfield
Record: 36-91
Previous ranking: 30
The baseball side takes a backseat with the A’s these days, unfortunately. They’ve now submitted their relocation application to MLB, leaving it to the relocation committee to review. Their move from Oakland to Las Vegas is inevitable. And their owner, John Fisher, speaking in an exclusive interview with the Las Vegas Review-Journal, said he is not considering selling the team, which has been a plea from A’s fans in Oakland all year. Instead, he talked about how Las Vegas can change things for the franchise, saying: “We’re super excited about where we are today with the new stadium we’re going to build, which I think is going to be iconic for The Strip.” The 2023 Oakland A’s, meanwhile, continue to flounder, winning no more than 10 games in any month this season. — Gonzalez
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Which teams take the next step in 2025? We have 11 candidates
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4 hours agoon
July 29, 2025By
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Bill ConnellyJul 29, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Bill Connelly is a writer for ESPN. He covers college football, soccer and tennis. He has been at ESPN since 2019.
No matter how we go about setting our preseason expectations for the 2025 college football season — polls, computer projections, pure gut instincts — we’re going to end up mostly right. We’re going to assume that the teams that were the best last season will be the best this season, and that’s going to bear out in most instances.
In other cases, however, we’re going to be hilariously incorrect. Take last season’s preseason top 10: Six of those teams ended up in the year-end top six and scored College Football Playoff bids, and two others were among the top three teams to miss the CFP. Very accurate! But then, preseason No. 9 Michigan and No. 10 Florida State fell from a combined 28-1 the year before to 10-15. Both finished unranked. They basically switched bodies, “Freaky Friday” style, with Arizona State and Indiana, who went from a combined 6-18 in 2023 to 24-5 with top-10 finishes and playoff bids.
Every season is mostly predictable except for a handful of absolute shocks. And the goal of this annual piece is to identify which of last season’s good surprise teams are most likely to sustain their gains and which of the bad surprise programs are most likely to bounce back. Using SP+ ratings and luck factors as our guide, we can usually pinpoint the likeliest teams for each category.
In last year’s edition of this column, the seven “most likely to sustain breakthroughs” teams I named went from a combined 49-41 with an average SP+ ranking of 53.9 to 60-32 and 40.6, respectively. Colorado, Colorado State and Miami won an additional 11 more games between them, while Colorado, Miami, Rutgers and Virginia Tech each improved by at least 14 more spots in SP+. Meanwhile, the six teams I named for the “most likely to rebound from a regression season” list went from a combined 27-47 with an 81.5 average ranking to 42-34 and 54.7. Five improved their win totals, and all six improved their SP+ rankings. Success!
The preseason poll rankings and final SP+ projections for 2025 are coming in August. But while we wait, let’s once again predict some of this coming season’s happier stories. Which of 2024’s unexpected breakthroughs might find even further heights? Which of last year’s disappointments are likeliest to bounce back?
Teams most likely to sustain 2024 gains
When our team surges to unexpected success in a given season, we like to think of this as the new reality. We’re good now! That’s never going to change again! Unfortunately, reality rarely agrees with that. Over the past 20 years, we’ve seen an average of 1.9 teams improving by at least 20 ratings points in SP+ and an average of 18.0 improving by at least 10 points. On average, these teams regress the next season 61% of the time, 32% by at least a touchdown.
These numbers haven’t necessarily changed in the 2020s, aka the transfer portal era. The rules of roster management have been completely altered, but since 2021 we’ve still seen 18.3 teams improving by 10-plus points in a given season. Interestingly, only 54% regressed the next year, 25% by a touchdown or more. We don’t yet know whether this is a small-sample effect or a genuine shift in the data, so I’ll still lean on the historic averages, but it’s something to watch.
In 2024, 16 teams improved by at least 10 points. Based on the averages above, we can expect about 40% of them — six or seven — to improve further in 2025. Only two were projected to do so in my most recent SP+ rankings, which means I’ll have to stray from the numbers to pull the list together. But after writing lengthy conference previews about each team, here are the teams I believe are the likeliest candidates to build on 2024’s surprise success:
2023: 3-9 record, 107th in SP+ (-11.3 adjusted points per game, or 11.3 worse than the average college football team)
2024: 11-3, 35th (+9.4)
2025 projection (as of May): 8.4 average wins, 22nd (+12.2)
From my Big 12 preview: “It’s hard to know what to do with a late-season surge. ASU was solid for about two-thirds of the season and outstanding for one-third, and while that wasn’t enough to earn the trust of SP+ — and a 6-2 record in one-score finishes will be tough to duplicate — enough of last year’s key contributors return to think that this could be a top-15-level team again.”
Because of all those close wins, it might be difficult for Kenny Dillingham’s Sun Devils to match last year’s 11-win total, especially without Cam Skattebo around to grind out tough-as-hell yards at times. But Skattebo is just about the only major departure. Quarterback Sam Leavitt should have an improved receiving corps, where Jordyn Tyson is joined by late-2024 big-play producer Malik McClain, veteran transfer Jalen Moss (Fresno State) and high-upside youngsters such as Noble Johnson (Clemson) and Jaren Hamilton (Alabama). Meanwhile, the offensive line and a defense that also surged down the stretch are both loaded with seniors.
This is a team built for another run and further improvement on paper, even if the god of close games turns against it at some point.
2023: 3-9 record, 97th in SP+ (-8.3 adjusted PPG)
2024: 8-5, 38th (+8.4)
2025 projection (as of May): 6.7 average wins, 35th (+7.5)
Again from the Big 12 preview: “Jake Spavital’s offense was magnificent. Sawyer Robertson threw for 3,071 yards and 28 TDs, while backs Bryson Washington and Dawson Pendergrass rushed for 1,699 rushing yards and 18 TDs. Baylor gained at least 20 yards on 8.7% of its snaps (10th in FBS) while gaining zero or fewer on just 27.7% (19th). That combination will score you lots of points. … The Bears scored 31 or more points nine times last year, and it would be a surprise if they did so fewer times in 2025. Big 12 contention, then, is up to the defense.”
Baylor won the last six games of the regular season, scoring an average of 12.1 points more than projected, and almost all of the reasons for the offensive surge return. It’s indeed up to Matt Powledge’s defense — which also improved in 2024, but only to 63rd in defensive SP+ — to determine the Bears’ fate. Experience won’t be an issue. Dave Aranda added 13 transfers to go with the 10 returnees who saw 200-plus snaps last year. And there are known playmakers such as tackle Jackie Marshall, incoming linebacker Travion Barnes (FIU) and nickelback Carl Williams IV, too. After rebounding into the SP+ top 40 last season, it sure looks like the Bears are built to crack the top 30 this time around.
2023: 3-9 record, 119th in SP+ (-15.2 adjusted PPG)
2024: 9-4, 87th (-4.0)
2025 projection (as of May): 7.7 average wins, 91st (-7.1)
From my MAC preview: “[Pete Lembo] engineered immediate improvement in his return to MAC life, and now leading rusher Al-Jay Henderson, leading receiver Victor Snow, three starting O-linemen and 12 of 17 defenders with at least 200 snaps all return. … From a pure height-and-weight standpoint, the depth chart should look like something from a power conference.”
Buffalo was extremely all-or-nothing last season, overachieving against SP+ projections by at least 11 points six times and underachieving by that much three times. But that’s a net gain! Even without any semblance of offensive efficiency, the Bulls fielded their best team in four years. This time around, they should have enough offensive experience to avoid quite as many three-and-outs, and maybe no Group of 5 defense returns a proven trio of disruptors in end Kobe Stewart, outside linebacker Dion Crawford and inside linebacker Red Murdock. SP+ projects UB as the third-best team in the MAC, but after a season-opening trip to Minnesota — not a gimme for the Golden Gophers — the Bulls are at least slight projected favorites in every game.
I wish I felt better about their quarterback situation, where either journeyman Ta’Quan Roberson or little-used backup Gunnar Gray is likely to start. But aside from maybe Toledo, no other MAC team brings this much upside to the table in 2025.
2023: 5-7 record, 75th in SP+ (-2.5 adjusted PPG)
2024: 10-3, 31st (+9.6)
2025 projection (as of May): 8.7 average wins, 19th (+14.3)
From my Big Ten preview: “The Illini won 10 games for the first time in 23 years, and [Bret] Bielema rang in 2025 by embarrassing Shane Beamer on national television. Illinois finished 16th in the AP poll, and now it leads the conference in returning production. … If experience produces sturdy play early in the season, look out. By the end of September, the Illini will have played relative toss-ups at Duke and Indiana and at home against USC. Win all three, and they’re going to be in the playoff discussion for quite a while. But it’s hard to get the breaks you need in close games for two straight years.”
Like Arizona State, Illinois could be another “improve on paper, regress in the win column” team depending on how long the good fortune in close games continues. But of the top four projected teams in the Big Ten, the Illini play only one and should win quite a few games by well more than one score. New go-to running back Aidan Laughery could enjoy a huge season, and if quarterback Luke Altmyer gets a good year from at least one transfer receiver — the most likely of the bunch: Hudson Clement (West Virginia) — this offense should be Illinois’ first top-50 attack in 15 years (!). I’m concerned about the remodeled defensive line, but coordinator Aaron Henry gets the benefit of the doubt. This should be a solid team.
0:42
Carson Beck: Joining Miami feels like ‘a full-circle moment’
Carson Beck joins “SportsCenter” to discuss growing up a Florida Gators fan and playing college football for some of their biggest rivals.
2023: 7-6 record, 28th in SP+ (+9.6 adjusted PPG)
2024: 10-3, 10th (+21.6)
2025 projection (as of May): 9.2 average wins, 12th (+18.8)
From my ACC preview: “After a dismal first season in charge — Miami fell to 5-7 and 71st in SP+ in 2022 — things have improved dramatically. The Canes jumped to 7-6 and 28th in 2023, and even with a defense that was actively working against the team for half the season, they improved further, to 10-3 and 10th in SP+, last season. … I like what Miami will have in the trenches, and despite the occasional INTs, [Georgia transfer Carson] Beck is a very good QB. But Miami will need the teardowns in the receiving corps and secondary to stick. I’m pretty sure the latter will, but I’m not sure Beck will have enough strong pass catchers.”
This one’s definitely more about sustaining gains than prepping for another surge. You can only rise so much higher than 10th. But I do think Mario Cristobal’s Hurricanes have a chance of matching last year’s general quality, albeit in a more balanced way: The offense will almost certainly regress a bit while the defense improves. If the latter matches or outpaces the former, voila, sustained gains!
With good health and better help up front, defensive line star Rueben Bain Jr. could have a huge year, and I really like the additions in the secondary, especially ultra-aggressive safety Zechariah Poyser (Jacksonville State). The Miami defense should have never been as poor as it was late last fall, but it will have a chance to make amends in 2025.
2023: 3-9 record, 91st in SP+ (-7.3 adjusted PPG)
2024: 7-6, 51st (+4.9)
2025 projection (as of May): 6.1 average wins, 47th (+3.4)
From the ACC preview: “As delightful as they looked during their unbeaten start, they looked equally lost during an 0-6 finish. They more than doubled their win total in the most disappointing possible way. … [Desmond Reid] aside, most of last year’s most exciting players were freshmen and sophomores, and one can see how experience might sand down rough edges and make Pitt an ACC dark horse. But that late-season collapse was pretty ugly. It’s up to the Panthers to prove whether the first or second half of the season showed us the way forward.”
It’s hard to trust any Pitt prediction. The Panthers improved by five wins in 2021, regressed by six in 2023, then improved by four in 2024. In that tiny span, they have ranked as high as sixth in offensive SP+ and as low as 108th. They’re capable of anything. But last year’s offense jumped to 54th and would have risen even further if quarterback Eli Holstein had stayed healthy. With Holstein, Reid, a more experienced offensive line and big-time defensive disruptors such as linebacker Kyle Louis and end Jimmy Scott, this is at least a top-40 team. We’ll see about the “ACC dark horse” line above, but further improvement feels likely.
Teams most likely to rebound from a 2024 stumble
In a universe in which you’re measured by wins and losses, everything is zero-sum: If someone’s rising, someone’s falling. And the trend for collapses is almost identical to the trend for sudden surges. Over the past 20 years, an average of 1.8 teams have collapsed by at least 20 adjusted points per game in SP+, and an average of 16.9 have fallen by at least 10 points. Of those teams that stumble, 64% of them improve the next season and 36% by at least a touchdown. The trends of the 2020s have been relatively similar: Only about 14.5 teams have regressed by 10-plus points over the past four seasons — again, we’ll see if that’s a trend — and 68% have rebounded the next year.
Last year, two teams regressed by 20-plus points: the aforementioned Florida State Seminoles and Michigan Wolverines. Twelve others fell by at least 10 points. Averages suggest about 36% of these 14 teams — around five — will improve by a touchdown or more in 2025. Here are the five I think are most likely:
2023: 9-4 record, 45th in SP+ (+5.9 adjusted PPG)
2024: 5-7, 111th (-11.7)
2025 projection (as of May): 6.2 average wins, 94th (-7.3)
From my Mountain West preview: “A lost season became an encouraging one late: Over their last five games, the Falcons overachieved against projections by an average of 17.7 points per game, and after a 20-3 loss to Army dropped them to 1-7, they won their last four games, most impressively destroying Oregon State, 28-0. The full-season averages still weren’t great, but as with Michigan, Air Force basically saw its win total cut in half from the previous season but somehow still ended up in a good mood.”
Even with Air Force’s recent success — at least nine wins in four consecutive full seasons — it was easy to predict a collapse in 2024, as the Falcons had one of the lowest returning production averages in recent memory. It’s almost as easy to predict a solid rebound this year, mainly because it already started late last season. If junior Josh Johnson is half-decent at quarterback, the offense should get back on track with help from fullback Dylan Carson, big-play slot back Cade Harris and error-free center Costen Cooley. The defense has quite a bit to replace in the secondary, but veteran defensive tackle Payton Zdroik should ensure disruption up front. This team should at least climb back to 7-5 or 8-4.
0:52
FSU QB Castellanos stands by Alabama jab
Florida State quarterback Tommy Castellanos speaks to reporters about what he meant by his jab at Alabama during the summer.
2023: 13-1 record, ninth in SP+ (+19.4 adjusted PPG)
2024: 2-10, 83rd (-3.2)
2025 projection (as of May): 6.8 average wins, 36th (+7.2)
Again from the ACC preview: “This was a collapse on the scale of Bobby Petrino’s last season at Louisville, Texas’ first season after 2009 BCS Championship disappointment and Notre Dame’s 2007 swoon under Charlie Weis. And it’s noteworthy that none of the coaches in charge during those collapses could right the ship. But [Mike] Norvell will try. … There are enough proven entities to assume the defense will bounce back. In fact, the collapse was so significant last season that we should assume some progression toward the mean everywhere. But how much of a rebound can you pull off after such a collapse?”
This is some pretty low-hanging fruit — if the Seminoles are average in 2025, that will qualify as solid improvement after last season’s disintegration. I’m not sure what to expect from a remodeled offense; new offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn has an awfully Malzahn-friendly QB in the speedy transfer Tommy Castellanos (Boston College) and new potential big-play receivers in Duce Robinson (USC), Squirrel White (Tennessee) and Randy Pittman Jr. (UCF), but it might be hard to get a rebuilt offensive line up to speed. Regardless, the defensive front six has some new playmakers, and again, the bar for improvement is incredibly low. I’m not sure how many games Norvell needs to win to save his job, but the Noles will almost certainly not go 2-10 again.
2023: 15-0 record, first in SP+ (+31.3 adjusted PPG)
2024: 8-5, 26th (+10.6)
2025 projection (as of May): 9.8 average wins, 10th (+21.5)
From the Big Ten preview: “The Wolverines went unbeaten when scoring at least 24 points (national scoring average: 28.0), but they reached that mark in only six of 13 games thanks primarily to a black hole at the QB position. They ranked 91st in Total QBR and 131st — last nationally among non-service academies — in passing yards per game (129.1). … Either five-star freshman Bryce Underwood or veteran transfer Mikey Keene (Fresno State) will begin the season at QB for Moore’s second Michigan team, and it’s probably fair to assume that Underwood will finish it there. His first spring was up-and-down, but going from the aforementioned black hole to the best high school prospect in the country is quite the leap.”
Seeing Michigan projected 10th overall was a bit concerning, as the offense still has loads of questions. But I’d be surprised if the Wolverines didn’t have a top-10 defense, and the schedule features only one projected top-15 team, per SP+. And they won eight games and beat Ohio State and Alabama while getting almost nothing from the QB. Even if Underwood isn’t ready to lead a CFP team yet, a return to 9-3 or so and occasional actual passing yardage don’t seem like too much to ask.
2023: 3-9 record, 116th in SP+ (-14.4 adjusted PPG)
2024: 1-11, 133rd (-25.6)
2025 projection (as of May): 3.4 average wins, 128th (-17.7)
From my Sun Belt preview: “What happens when you graft one-quarter of last year’s Sun Belt championship roster onto the worst roster in the conference? We’re going to find out! After signing more than 50 transfers in addition to the normal freshman/JUCO signing class, [Charles Huff] has almost completely flipped the roster in six months. … SP+ is setting the bar low because things like “recent history” still tend to matter more often than not. But as with Marshall, this is a total, unprojectable roster reset.”
The story of Southern Miss in 2025 could only take place in 2025 and no time before. Southern Miss was wretched last season, but almost no one’s left from that team. Meanwhile, quarterback Braylon Braxton, five receivers, four defensive linemen and eight defensive backs — including star corner Josh Moten — and quite a few others followed Charles Huff from Marshall to Hattiesburg.
I have no idea how to set accurate expectations, but as with Florida State, this is low-hanging fruit. It will be an improvement if the Golden Eagles go 3-9 and rank in the 120s. And with zero opponents projected higher than 71st in SP+, topping the 4.5 wins set at ESPN BET doesn’t seem outlandish.
2023: 14-1 record, 13th in SP+ (+16.4 adjusted PPG)
2024: 6-7, 58th (+3.1)
2025 projection (as of May): 6.3 average wins, 39th (+6.4)
Again from the Big Ten preview: “If [Demond Williams Jr.] is genuinely good — and doesn’t take a million sacks — then there’s a legitimate chance for a second-year leap for the UW offense. He’ll have a relatively experienced line in front of him and a skill corps that includes 1,000-yard back Jonah Coleman (and a physical backup in sophomore Adam Mohammed), receivers Denzel Boston and Penn State transfer Omari Evans, and another sophomore in big-play tight end Decker DeGraaf. … Fisch generated lots of traction in his second season at Arizona, and it’s not hard to envision something similar happening at UW. But he’ll need to hit on a lot of transfers, and he’ll need his faith in a guy with 153 dropbacks wholly rewarded.”
In the past four seasons, Washington has bounced from 4-8 to 11-2 to 14-1 to 6-7. That’s enough to give you motion sickness, but the combination of Williams, Coleman, Boston and a semi-experienced offensive line should do good things. Plus, the defense has enough exciting new players — tackle Ta’ita’i Uiagalelei (Arizona), linebacker Xe’ree Alexander (UCF), corner Tacario Davis (Arizona), safeties CJ Christian (Florida International) and Alex McLaughlin (NAU) — that new coordinator Ryan Walters might get away with the aggressive man defense he usually prefers. Playing four projected top-20 teams could make 8-4 or so the ceiling this year, but improvement still seems likely.
Sports
‘Just a top-shelf human being’: Teammates, opponents remember Ryne Sandberg
Published
13 hours agoon
July 29, 2025By
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Jesse RogersJul 28, 2025, 11:30 PM ET
Close- Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
Chicago Cubs Hall of Fame second baseman Ryne Sandberg died on Monday at age 65. Sandberg, known for his power, speed and defensive prowess during his 16-year major league career, was the face of the Cubs during his 15 seasons with the franchise and a fan favorite throughout the sport.
Originally diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer in January of 2024, Sandberg was still around the Cubs as recently as spring training — and just as he did in his playing days, he made his presence felt with his signature combination of power and grace.
As the baseball world mourns the loss of an icon, those who knew Sandberg best shared their favorite stories about the Hall of Famer.
‘Ryno would be out there at 9 a.m.’
Sandberg was traded from the Philadelphia Phillies to the Cubs in January 1982 after struggling during his first call-up in Philly. A legendarily hard worker, Sandberg was willing to do whatever it took to make sure his stay in Chicago would go differently.
Larry Bowa, who was dealt along with Sandberg in the trade for veteran infielder Ivan DeJesus, remembers the hours Sandberg put in as he transformed from a light-hitting rookie in Philadelphia to a budding superstar in Chicago.
“I think about how he handled himself when he first got called up. He struggled out of the gate. I watched this guy not let it affect him. It might have affected him on the inside, but the way he handled himself on the outside was great,” Bowa said.
“Ryno would be out there at 9 a.m. [Manager] Jim Frey would tell him [to] hit every ball over the tarp and into the seats down the left-field line in foul territory. Hit it with authority over that tarp. Ryno looked at him like he was crazy. ‘I want every ball with authority over that tarp,’ Frey kept telling him. He did it for a week straight. That’s how he learned how to pull the ball.”
‘Just ungodly consistent’
2:27
How Ryne Sandberg will be remembered in Chicago
Jesse Rogers reflects on Ryne Sandberg’s career in Chicago after he died on Monday at the age of 65.
After his power stroke clicked, it didn’t take long for Sandberg to take his game to the highest level. He was named National League MVP in 1984 after hitting .314 with 19 home runs and 19 triples, stealing 32 bases and leading the Cubs to their first postseason appearance in 39 years.
Perhaps no one had a better view for Sandberg’s dominant campaign than his close friend, Cubs leadoff hitter Bobby Dernier. The two batted 1-2 in the Chicago lineup and earned the nickname “The Daily Double” as they combined to score 208 runs that season.
“Just ungodly consistent,” Dernier said of what made Sandberg so great. “And the style of game back then demanded a little bit of baserunning prowess and being capable of stealing bases and scoring a lot of runs. And so that was our style. He was tremendous.
“Pitchers were always paying a little more attention to me on the bases than him at the plate, and that was a big mistake and he’d take full advantage. He’d almost giggle about it, is what I remember in the dugout.”
Sandberg cemented his legacy during that season with a signature game against the St. Louis Cardinals on June 23, forever known in Chicago as “The Sandberg Game.” He hit two game-tying home runs off Hall of Fame closer Bruce Sutter in the ninth and 10th innings before the Cubs won the game in the 11th — in front of a national TV audience.
“After he tied it up, I ended up hitting the ball off the wall, but if mine goes out, it’s probably never called the Sandberg game,” outfielder Gary Matthews said with a laugh. “He was great at everything that he did. I hit behind him and he was always on base.”
‘He had a perfect swing for his home ballpark’
Sandberg hit 282 career home runs during an era of baseball where second baseman weren’t known for that kind of power, but he was more than just a long ball threat. Six of those home runs — the second most off an opposing pitcher — were hit off Hall of Famer John Smoltz, who recalled one memorable afternoon for Sandberg.
“I gave up two home runs to him in a game and I had a [autograph] card show after the game and everyone in the world knew I gave up two home runs to Ryne Sandberg,” Smoltz said. “One was an inside-the-park home run. Those fans at the card show reminded me of that.
“He had a perfect swing for his home ballpark. He had a flatter swing that worked great for the angles at Wrigley Field, especially when the wind was blowing in.”
Sandberg was more than just an offensive threat; he also won nine consecutive Gold Glove awards during his time with the Cubs and posted a 123-game errorless streak.
“I used to tell Joe Morgan, ‘This guy doesn’t have to take a second seat to anybody on defense,'” Matthews said. “Morgan would say Ryne’s uniform was always clean. I said, ‘Well, you have to dive because you can’t get in front of it! Don’t get on him for perfecting the backhand.’ In the end Joe said, ‘You’re right.'”
‘He’s in a class by himself’
For all of his accomplishments on the field, the way Sandberg handled himself as a competitor and away from the game is what many who knew him best will remember about him.
“He’s an outstanding human being,” Bowa said. “That’s what I think of. Such a good family guy. His mental toughness is off the charts. Don’t let people deceive you by that little laugh he has all the time. He wanted to win as much as anybody. I’ve been around Pete Rose, and Ryno is right there.”
Smoltz added: “He’s in a class by himself. You would never know he was one of the greatest players ever, just by the way he carried himself and the ‘aw, shucks’ type attitude.
“I love competing against greatness that has integrity and character like Ryne Sandberg had. The way he carried himself, the way he was as a person is what I think about. It sure was nice to see him represent the sport and the city he played for.”
“Joy,” Dernier said. “That’s the first thing, and way so many more happiness types of stories. And it’s a grin on my face to think about him. And yeah, right now it’s melancholy that we know he’s gotten called up to the real big leagues. But I’m glad I knew him and I loved him being underestimated.”
‘Oh, man, I loved Ryno, but he’s lucky he was that good at baseball’
Of course, there were a few moments in Sandberg’s career where he wasn’t as gracious. In the Cubs clubhouse, teammates saw a different side of the Hall of Famer — a playful troublemaker and prankster.
“We had those chairs directors they use making movies, held together by sticks,” Matthews said. “Ryno would always take the sticks out, put the seat back in, and daily I’d fall to the ground. He’d be over there snickering or walking away.
“Or he would load your cigarette up and make it explode in a non-harmful way. Then when you figured it out, he would put two of those in the pack. He thought that was the funniest thing.”
Despite that kind of back-and-forth, Matthews and Sandberg often golfed together.
“I would ask for a few strokes,” Matthews said. “He would politely say, ‘no strokes, play better.’ He would hit some balls you couldn’t believe. Ball after ball. He would hit one and know it’s a good one but he’d ask, ‘Do you think that was any good?’ And just smile at me.
“Oh, man, I loved Ryno, but he’s lucky he was that good at baseball,” Matthews said with a laugh.
“He’d stir the pot and then walk away and look over his shoulder,” Bowa added. “He’d be cracking up after getting us going. He was so quiet outwardly with you guys [media], but not with us.”
‘He made such an impact on me ‘
After his playing days, Sandberg served as the manager of the Philadelphia Phillies from 2013 to 2015 before returning to Chicago, often putting on a uniform as a spring instructor and imparting the lessons from his Hall of Fame career to a new generation of Cubs.
“I just think it’s cool that he’s somebody that has kind of done everything in our sport but still doesn’t approach the game with any kind of ego,” current Chicago second baseman Nico Hoerner said. “He doesn’t talk like he has the answers to everything or the conversation is never about him.
“He’s kind of softspoken, but then if you got him going on something he really cared about, it’s really cool to hear him open up, whether it’s routines he had or how he took care of his body or just fun memories with teammates or playing at Wrigley.”
Shortstop Dansby Swanson added: “Just such a top-shelf human being. He made such an impact on me even in my short time of being able to be around him. Just an unbelievable human being and someone that I’m very, very grateful to have met and spent time with, whether it’s talking about life or talking about ball.”
It’s those attributes, the ones the baseball world got to see on the field and the ones only his teammates were able to witness, that were missed in retirement. But his attitude about life stands out for everyone.
“We talked about a lot of things, about defense and offense, but we talked about life, too,” rookie third baseman Matt Shaw said. “When he first came up, he struggled a little bit early on and he was like, ‘No matter what happens, you just got to keep believing in yourself and keep going.’ And I definitely take that to heart, and that’s something that I definitely think about a lot — is that belief to just to keep going.”

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ESPN News Services
Jul 28, 2025, 09:26 PM ET
CHICAGO — Ryne Sandberg, a Hall of Fame second baseman who became one of baseball’s best all-around players while starring for the Chicago Cubs died Monday at age 65.
Sandberg was surrounded by his family when he died at his home, according to the team.
Sandberg announced in January 2024 that he was diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer. He had chemotherapy and radiation treatments, and then said in August 2024 that he was cancer-free.
But he posted on Instagram on Dec. 10 that his cancer had returned and spread to other organs. He announced this month that he was still fighting, while “looking forward to making the most of every day with my loving family and friends.”
Cubs chairman Tom Ricketts said Sandberg “will be remembered as one of the all-time greats in nearly 150 years of this historic franchise.”
“His dedication to and respect for the game, along with his unrelenting integrity, grit, hustle, and competitive fire were hallmarks of his career,” Ricketts said in the team’s statement.
The Cubs said they would wear a special jersey patch to commemorate Sandberg for the rest of the season.
Sandberg was born and raised in Spokane, Washington. He was selected out of high school by the Philadelphia Phillies in the 20th round of the 1978 amateur draft.
He made his major league debut in 1981 and went 1-for-6 in 13 games with the Phillies. In January 1982, he was traded to Chicago with Larry Bowa for veteran infielder Ivan De Jesus.
It turned into one of the most lopsided deals in baseball history.
Sandberg hit .285 with 282 homers, 1,061 RBIs and 344 steals in 15 years with Chicago. He made 10 All-Star teams — winning the Home Run Derby in 1990 — and collected nine Gold Gloves.
“Ryne Sandberg was a legend of the Chicago Cubs franchise and a beloved figure throughout Major League Baseball,” MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said. “He was a five-tool player who excelled in every facet of the game thanks to his power, speed and work ethic.”
Even with Sandberg’s stellar play, the Cubs made only two postseason appearances in his time there.
He was the National League MVP in 1984, batting .314 with 19 homers, 84 RBIs, 32 steals, 19 triples and 114 runs scored. Chicago won the NL East and Sandberg hit .368 (7-for-19) in the playoffs, but the Cubs were eliminated by San Diego after winning the first two games of the NL Championship Series at Wrigley Field.
The 1984 season featured what Cubs fans still call “The Sandberg Game,” when he homered twice and drove in seven runs in a 12-11 victory over St. Louis in 11 innings on June 23.
The Cubs paid tribute to Sandberg and that game when they unveiled a statue of the infielder outside Wrigley Field on that date in 2024.
“He was a superhero in this city,” Jed Hoyer, Cubs president of baseball operations, said during a TV broadcast of the team’s game on July 20. “You think about [Michael] Jordan, Walter Payton and Ryne Sandberg all here at the same time, and I can’t imagine a person handling their fame better, their responsibility for a city better than he did.”
Sandberg led Chicago back to the playoffs in 1989, hitting .290 with 30 homers as the Cubs won the NL East. He batted .400 (8-for-20) in the NLCS, but Chicago lost to San Francisco in five games.
Sandberg set a career high with an NL-best 40 homers in 1990 and drove in a career-best 100 runs in 1990 and 1991, but he never made it back to the postseason. He retired after the 1997 season.
“When you examine the offense and defense, you’ll find some years where he was the best player you’ve ever seen in your life,” former Cubs first baseman Mark Grace said.
Sandberg was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2005, receiving 76.2% of the vote by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America in his third year on the ballot. The Cubs retired his No. 23 that same season.
“Ryne Sandberg had a relentless work ethic and an unshakable positive outlook,” Hall of Fame chair Jane Forbes Clark said. “With it, he inspired all those who knew him.”
Sandberg also managed the Phillies from August 2013 to June 2015, going 119-159. He got the interim job when Charlie Manuel was fired, and he resigned with the Phillies in the middle of a difficult 2015 season.
Sandberg is survived by his wife, Margaret; his children, Justin, Lindsey, Steven, BR and Adriane; and 11 grandchildren.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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