
College football Power Rankings: First impressions of each Top 25 team
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adminThe thing about first impressions is you can’t take them back. Some are underwhelming, like Arch Manning‘s at Ohio State or Nico Iamaleava‘s at UCLA. Some could be a harbinger for big things ahead, like Florida State steamrolling Alabama following a 2-10 season in 2024, or LSU finally winning an opener under Brian Kelly against the toughest Week 1 competition it has faced. Jackson Arnold had a tough first go-around at Oklahoma, but his first impression with Auburn left Tigers fans tickled.
First impressions can be deceiving — shoutout to Kenny Trill and a magical night in 2014 — but they also provide much-yearned-for context to the power rankings. LSU’s defense looked significantly better, as did Utah’s offense and Texas A&M’s passing game. We’ll learn more about Michigan and Oklahoma, and specifically quarterbacks Bryce Underwood and John Mateer, this coming week in Norman, but so far, so good.
There’s some shuffling at the top after big games this weekend, and here’s a look at how we see the Top 25 coming out of Week 1. — Adam Rittenberg
Despite debuting eight new starters and a new coordinator in Matt Patricia, the Buckeyes defense shined in a 14-7 victory over Texas. Ohio State came up big when it mattered most, stuffing Texas four times on fourth down, including twice inside the Buckeye 10-yard line. Offensively, quarterback Julian Sayin played a clean game in his first career start. He completed 13 of 20 passes, while avoiding any big mistakes. He didn’t take a sack and didn’t turn the ball over. Coach Ryan Day suggested the Buckeyes will gradually open up the offense moving forward. But while their young passer settles in, the Buckeyes showed they can win with defense. The defending national champs also showed they remain the team to beat. — Jake Trotter
Preseason ranking: 2
The Nittany Lions did not mess around in their opener, rolling to a 46-11 win over Nevada. Quarterback Drew Allar was extremely sharp, hitting 22 of 26 passes for 217 yards with one TD and no turnovers. Pass rusher Dani Dennis-Sutton got off to a dominant start and forced two fumbles. New transfer wideouts Kyron Hudson and Trebor Pena enjoyed productive debuts with a combined 163 yards on 13 catches. Nevada didn’t punch in a touchdown until the final minute of garbage time. This squad shouldn’t get seriously challenged until it’s time to open Big Ten play against Oregon on Sept. 27, but it’s still encouraging to see them play clean and totally in control as they kick off one of the most anticipated Penn State seasons in a long time. — Max Olson
Preseason ranking: 8
The Tigers spent about $18 million overhauling their roster this past offseason, with much of the investment being spent on defense. The early results were promising in Saturday night’s 17-10 victory at No. 4 Clemson. LSU not only snapped its five-game losing streak in season openers, but it did it against the defending ACC champions in a hostile road environment. LSU limited Clemson to only 32 rushing yards and harassed quarterback Cade Klubnik for much of the night. Cornerback Mansoor Delane, a transfer from Virginia Tech, had an interception and received a game ball for his work in the secondary. Along with NC State transfer Tamarcus Cooley and former Houston safety A.J. Haulcy, Delane vastly improved the back end of LSU’s defense, which has been the team’s trouble spot the past few seasons. — Mark Schlabach
Preseason ranking: 4
Quarterback Gunner Stockton passed his first test as the Bulldogs’ starting quarterback, albeit against rebuilding Marshall, which figures to be one of the worst teams in the FBS this season. Stockton was forced into action in this past season’s SEC championship game against Texas and a CFP quarterfinal against Notre Dame after Carson Beck was hurt. Against the Thundering Herd, Stockton passed for 190 yards with two touchdowns and ran for 73 yards with two scores in the Bulldogs’ 45-7 victory. He looked confident and wisely used his legs in the red zone. Georgia ran for 239 yards, which was an emphasis this past offseason since it ranked next-to-last in the SEC in that department in 2024. USC transfer Zachariah Branch looked as good as advertised, hauling in three catches for 95 yards, including a 47-yard touchdown. Georgia gets another warmup against FCS program Austin Peay next week before opening SEC play at Tennessee on Sept. 13. — Schlabach
Preseason ranking: 10
A year ago, Miami’s playoff hopes were dashed by a defense that couldn’t get a stop. In Week 1, it was the Hurricanes’ defense that saved the day. After the offense stagnated down the stretch and Notre Dame tied the game at 24, things could’ve fallen apart, but a pass rush led by Rueben Bain Jr. and Akheem Mesidor stole the show, enveloping CJ Carr on back-to-back plays on the final drive for the Irish. The question now is whether Miami can sustain. Last year, the Canes opened with a big Week 1 win, too. Now, it’s time for Miami to prove it can play at this level week after week. — David Hale
Preseason ranking: 9
Even though coach Dan Lanning did not name Dante Moore the starting quarterback for the Ducks ahead of their season opener against Montana State, Saturday’s matchup showed why there was no official declaration necessary. Moore took the reins of an offense previously led by Bo Nix and Dillon Gabriel and seamlessly made it hum on their way to a commanding 59-13 win over an FCS opponent. In his first game as a starter, Moore threw for three touchdowns; as a team, Oregon threw for 253 yards and ran for 254 yards. The balanced attack, complemented by a defense that once again looks stout and held the Bobcats to 244 total yards, made for a proper opening statement. As Lanning said after the game, this was “certainly a better start than we had last season” when the Ducks barely beat both Idaho and Boise State. — Paolo Uggetti
Preseason ranking: 1
Texas ended four drives on downs, including one on the 1-yard-line and another in the red zone, and lost by just one touchdown in a 14-7 loss at Ohio State on Saturday. Arch Manning struggled, particularly in the first three quarters, going 0-for-5 with an interception on passes of five or more air yards in the first three quarters, and ended the game with 37% of his passes missing the target, the worst percentage by a Texas quarterback in the past 10 seasons. Breaking in four new offensive linemen on the road in Columbus along with a new quarterback was always going to be a challenge, but it really showed up on the 10 plays Texas ran in the red zone, with just 26 yards and no scores. Returning home to face San José State next week gives Texas a chance to get Manning and the offense untracked. — Dave Wilson
Preseason ranking: 6
If the concern entering the season was the QB, those questions were largely answered in a loss to Miami. CJ Carr accounted for three touchdowns and led the Irish from down 14 to tie it late in the fourth quarter, but it was too little, too late. The lack of touches for the tailbacks, particularly Jeremiyah Love, was frustrating, but if the result wasn’t what Notre Dame fans hoped for, the overall performance — particularly in the second half — showed this year’s Irish are still a worthy playoff contender. — Hale
Preseason ranking: 3
It would be easy to write off Clemson after they dropped their opener to LSU at home. It was Clemson’s third straight loss in an opener and its fourth in the past five seasons. Clemson scored a combined 23 points in those four defeats, which has to be concerning for coach Dabo Swinney. But this past season would serve as a cautionary tale for anyone ready to dismiss the Tigers as a CFP contender.
After Georgia routed Clemson 34-3 in the first game of the 2024 season, the Tigers rebounded to go 9-3 in the regular season and beat SMU 34-31 in the ACC championship game. Cade Klubnik didn’t play well against LSU, completing 19 of 38 passes for 230 yards with one touchdown. LSU’s defense did a great job keeping him in the pocket. The Tigers clearly missed star receiver Antonio Williams, who left the game on Clemson’s second possession with a hamstring injury. Swinney doesn’t know his status for next week’s contest against Troy. — Schlabach
Preseason ranking: 12
In an opener that was extremely meaningful to Shane and Frank Beamer, South Carolina pulled away for a 24-11 win over Virginia Tech by flexing its big-play ability. The Gamecocks broke up a 10-8 game in the fourth quarter with an 80-yard punt return touchdown by Vicari Swain followed by a 64-yard touchdown shot to Nyck Harbor. If Harbor is ready to take the next big step as a complete and reliable wideout after a career-high 99 receiving yards, that’s an exciting development for this LaNorris Sellers-led offense. It’s no surprise that an impact special teams play helped decide this one, and South Carolina’s defense deserves credit for allowing just three field goals on the day. — Olson
Preseason ranking: 15
The Aggies made adding explosiveness on offense a priority this offseason, adding transfers KC Concepcion and Mario Craver at wide receiver. It paid off in Game 1, with QB Marcel Reed throwing a career-high four TDs, with 194 yards and three of those TDs going to those two. Concepcion also added an 80-yard punt return. The Aggies struggled to get the running game going (23 carries, 108 yards, Reed led all rushers with 39 yards) and couldn’t stop the run, allowing 6.2 yards per carry to UTSA, with Robert Henry Jr. running for 177 yards and two TDs. But they pulled away in a tight game and got the win. — Wilson
Preseason ranking: 18
Iowa State quarterback Rocco Becht was nearly flawless as Iowa State routed South Dakota, an FCS semifinalist a year ago, 55-7. Becht completed 19 of 20 passes for 278 yards with three touchdowns, making quick work against a dangerous opponent. The Cyclones are 2-0 for the fourth time under Matt Campbell with the Cy-Hawk Trophy on the line this week against Iowa. — Kyle Bonagura
Preseason ranking: NR
This is not 2024, when Florida State went 2-10. That was the emphatic statement the Seminoles delivered in a 31-17 win over the Crimson Tide. Eager to put last season behind them, the Seminoles played with the type of physicality, aggressiveness and emotion that coach Mike Norvell promised the college football world would see. Transfer quarterback Tommy Castellanos set the tone from the beginning, backing up his summer trash talk with 152 yards passing and a team-leading 78 yards rushing. Florida State rushed 46 times for 236 yards — imposing its will on the ground under new offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn. Meanwhile, Alabama transfer Earl Little Jr. dominated on defense with nine total tackles. — Andrea Adelson
Preseason ranking: 13
True freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood lived up to the hype in his debut after winning the starting job during preseason. The former No. 1 recruit completed 21 of 31 passes for 251 yards and a touchdown, as the Wolverines coasted by New Mexico, 34-17. Alabama transfer Justice Haynes rushed for 159 yards and three touchdowns, providing a glimpse of what could be a dynamic Michigan backfield. Underwood will be tested next weekend at Oklahoma. The Wolverines defense will be tested, too, especially if standout linebacker Jaishawn Barham can’t play in the first half after he was ejected for targeting in the third quarter during a sack. Coach Sherrone Moore said the Wolverines will appeal the ruling with hopes of getting Barham back. — Trotter
Preseason ranking: 14
The Illini will learn a lot about themselves in September, when they visit both Duke and Indiana. There wasn’t much to extract from Friday’s 52-3 opening win against Western Illinois, but Illinois dominated throughout like a good team is supposed to do. Gabe Jacas looked every bit like a national awards candidate, recording two sacks, 2.5 tackles for loss, a forced fumble and a pass breakup, while senior quarterback Luke Altmyer had an extremely efficient night, completing 17 of 21 passes for 217 yards and three scores. An offense looking for explosive plays has a threat in Hank Beatty, and if the veterans play to their potential, this team will be tough to beat. — Rittenberg
Preseason ranking: 11
The Sun Devils’ 38-19 win against FCS Northern Arizona wasn’t particularly meaningful in any obvious way. It was a comfortable game in which the Sun Devils were never really threatened but also wasn’t a dominant victory against an overmatched opponent. Quarterback Sam Leavitt was solid, not spectacular.
He completed 25 of 39 passes for 257 yards with a pair of touchdowns and an interception, but did showcase his athleticism on a 52-yard touchdown run. With Cam Skattebo off to the NFL, the run game was less of a focus as three ASU running backs — Kyson Brown (7), Raleek Brown (5) and Kanye Udoh (2) — combined for just 14 carries for 130 yards. — Bonagura
Preseason ranking: 16
The Gators did exactly what they were expected to do in a 55-0 win over Long Island. Behind DJ Lagway, they scored the most points of the Billy Napier era, and posted their first shutout since 2021. Lagway went 15 of 18 for 120 yards with three touchdown passes and moved to 7-1 as a starter. Jadan Baugh rushed for over 100 yards, while Vernell Brown III had a dazzling debut with three catches for 79 yards — the most yardage in school history by a true freshman receiver in his first career start. The defense, meanwhile, allowed just 86 total yards and did not allow Long Island to advance to the red zone. The next matchup will provide a bigger test, as the Gators host USF, which upset Boise State in Week 1. — Adelson
Preseason ranking: 24
Joey Aguilar fared well in his debut as the new Volunteers QB1, putting up 281 total yards and three touchdowns to guide a 45-26 win over Syracuse in Atlanta. The veteran passer got plenty of help from an excellent run game that pounded the Orange for 246 yards on 6.2 yards per carry, including a team-high 92 yards from Duke transfer Star Thomas. The Vols’ defense had a tough time getting off the field at times, surrendering three fourth-down conversions and three long touchdown drives, but still delivered big plays with five sacks, two takeaways and a Colton Hood scoop-and-score. They’ll get one more tune-up against ETSU next week before Georgia comes to Knoxville on Sept. 13. — Olson
Preseason ranking: 20
Sure, quarterback Austin Simmons cruised (20 of 31, 341 yards, three touchdowns) and Kewan Lacy (16 carries, 108 yards, three touchdowns) helped power a 295-yard rushing performance in the Rebels’ 63-7 opening win over Georgia State. But the night truly belonged to Zxavian Harris, Ole Miss’ towering, 6-foot-8, 330-pound defensive tackle. Harris recorded his first sack of the season on Georgia State’s third offensive series. Two quarters later, he delivered some real fireworks with his interception of Panthers quarterback Christian Veilleux, a moment Harris so perfectly capped by snapping the basketball hoop on the Rebels’ sideline with a ferocious dunk. Round 1, in 2025, belonged to the big man on the Ole Miss defensive line. — Eli Lederman
Preseason ranking: 19
With a 42-13 win over East Texas A&M, SMU officially put last year’s late stumbles — an ACC championship game loss on a last-second 56-yard field goal and a playoff defeat at the hands of Penn State — in the rearview mirror, but it probably didn’t offer much else in the way of real insight to this team. Quarterback Kevin Jennings looked no worse for his brutal performance against the Nittany Lions last December, but he did have a pick (to go along with three touchdowns). The ground game managed 140 yards but didn’t establish a lead back. The defense created three takeaways but also allowed 351 yards to an FCS school. In other words, the real SMU probably won’t be revealed until the Mustangs take the field against Baylor in Week 2. — Hale
Preseason ranking: NR
With all eyes on Nico Iamaleava at the Rose Bowl, the Utes crashed the party, stitching together a resounding, all-around performance on their way to a 43-10 win over UCLA to kick off their season. New Mexico transfer Devon Dampier was the star of the night; the Utah quarterback ignited a Utes offense that was tepid last season, and he did it both over the air and on the ground — tallying 206 yards and two passing touchdowns as well as 87 rushing yards and one rushing TD. Though the defense held the Bruins to 220 yards, the game was a showcase for Utah’s new-look offense, which not only converted 14 of 16 third downs on its way to 492 total yards, but also included touchdowns by two defensive players: linebacker Lander Barton and cornerback Smith Snowden. — Uggetti
Preseason ranking: 7
The Crimson Tide probably wish they had a second chance to make a first impression after a 31-17 loss to Florida State. Outside the opening scoring drive, nothing Alabama did looked like a championship-caliber team. Ty Simpson struggled for consistency, the ground game was never established, and Florida State bullied Alabama up front on both sides of the ball. Coach Kalen DeBoer said there were “no excuses” for the performance, but it was obvious Alabama missed starting running back Jam Miller and defensive tackle Tim Keenan III. Making matters worse, receiver Ryan Williams was concussed late in the game. DeBoer has to find answers and fast. — Adelson
Preseason ranking: 23
Sooners coach Brent Venables described his team’s 35-3 win over Illinois State as “pretty vanilla.” Still, Washington State transfer quarterback John Mateer showed off what he can do, accounting for four total touchdowns and passing Baker Mayfield for the most passing yards by a quarterback in his debut (392) in program history. Southern Illinois transfer pass catcher Keontez Lewis delivered a promising start of his own (nine catches, 119 yards, two touchdowns), while linebacker-turned-tight end Jaren Kanak (five catches, 90 yards) impressed in his new role. Worth noting: The Sooners rushed for just 103 yards against the FCS Redbirds with Cal transfer running back Jaydn Ott still recovering from a shoulder injury and playing only a handful of snaps. Oklahoma gets an early test in Week 2 when Michigan comes to Norman next Saturday. — Lederman
Preseason ranking: NR
Sonny Dykes and the Horned Frogs dominated North Carolina, spoiling the debut of coach Bill Belichick. The first impression is an easy one: This team appears to be a challenger for a Big 12 title. While North Carolina is breaking in a new team, the Horned Frogs brought veterans back across the board, and it showed — starting with quarterback Josh Hoover. There was terrific balance on offense, with Kevorian Barnes rushing for more than 100 yards, and Jordan Dwyer going over 100 yards receiving. Meanwhile, the defense scored two touchdowns and limited the North Carolina offense after the opening drive. Dykes and TCU were on the losing end of Deion Sanders’ debut at Colorado a few years ago, and they were eager not to repeat history in Belichick’s first game as a college coach. — Adelson
Preseason ranking: 17
Curt Cignetti’s Indiana teams handle inferior competition and a season-opening 27-14 win against Old Dominion proved to be no exception. The Hoosiers finished with massive advantages in total yards (502-314) and first downs (28-11). Transfer quarterback Fernando Mendoza‘s IU debut wasn’t the smoothest, though, as he completed 18 of 31 passes for 193 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions, and added a rushing touchdown. The Hoosiers reached Old Dominion territory on 10 of 11 possessions but had two turnovers on downs, a fumble and a missed field goal. The score should have been more lopsided, and Indiana will need to be sharper on offense as it tunes up for its Sept. 20 Big Ten opener against Illinois. — Rittenberg
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Sports
Valdez denies hitting Astros catcher on purpose
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6 hours agoon
September 3, 2025By
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ESPN News Services
Sep 3, 2025, 12:41 AM ET
HOUSTON — Astros starter Framber Valdez said he apologized to catcher Cesar Salazar after hitting him in the chest with a pitch Tuesday night, but the left-hander insisted it wasn’t intentional.
Valdez appeared to shake off Salazar on a 1-0 pitch with the bases loaded and Trent Grisham of the New York Yankees at the plate in the fifth inning. Salazar then urged Valdez to step off the mound, but he proceeded with the pitch, which Grisham launched to deep left field to give New York a 6-0 lead in an eventual 7-1 win.
On the second pitch to the next batter, Valdez hit Salazar in the chest with a 93 mph pitch, raising questions about whether he was upset about what happened in the Grisham at-bat and if it was intended.
Valdez said it was not.
“What happened with us, we just got crossed up,” Valdez said in Spanish through an interpreter. “I called for that pitch, I threw it and we got crossed up. We went down to the dugout and I excused myself with him and I said sorry to him and I take full responsibility for that.”
Valdez was then asked directly if he did it on purpose.
“No,” he said. “It was not intentional.”
Valdez and Salazar were talking when reporters entered the clubhouse after the game, and Valdez said they had sorted things out.
“We were able to talk through it,” he said. “We spoke after the game … at his locker and everything’s good between us. It’s just stuff that happens in baseball. But yeah, we talked through it and we’re good.”
Salazar also was asked about what happened on the pitch where he was hit.
“The stadium was loud,” he said. “I thought I pressed the button, but I pressed the wrong button. I was expecting another pitch, but it wasn’t it.”
Salazar said Valdez didn’t hit him on purpose.
“No, me and Framber we actually have a really good relationship,” he said.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
Sports
McLean retires last 14, 1st Met to win 1st 4 starts
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6 hours agoon
September 3, 2025By
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ESPN News Services
Sep 2, 2025, 10:51 PM ET
DETROIT — Rookie Nolan McLean continued his brilliant start to his MLB career, retiring his final 14 batters Tuesday night to lead the Mets to a 12-5 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
McLean became the first Mets pitcher to go 4-0 in his first four starts, and just the first pitcher in the majors to do so since Chase Anderson, who started 5-0 with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2014.
After a rocky first inning, McLean finished with seven strikeouts while giving up two runs on three hits and three walks. He is the first pitcher to win his first four career starts while allowing two or fewer runs in each start since Jered Weaver, who did it in his first seven starts for the Los Angeles Angels in 2006.
“Another impressive outing for him,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “We all saw how in that first inning, especially the sweeper and the curveball … he didn’t have command of those pitches. A couple of walks, and they got him with a couple of singles there. That’s what you call pitching. Understanding that you have to make adjustments and find a way to get through five or six innings, and he was able to do that.”
Mendoza added: “Another really good sign for a kid that is just making his fourth start at the big league level.”
McLean’s 28 strikeouts through his first four starts ranks second in Mets history behind only Nolan Ryan (29).
Mets first baseman Pete Alonso, who homered twice Tuesday night, said McLean’s work ethic has a lot to do with the incredible start to his career.
“I know everyone’s going to be talking about all the great stuff he’s doing on the field, which is for sure warranted, but how he’s going about his business, the day to day, it’s super impressive,” Alonso said.
“And that’s the reason why he’s able to do what he’s been able to do on the field. … He’s been a pro since he’s come up, and there’s no shock and awe for why he’s found his success.”
Juan Soto and Luis Torrens also homered for the Mets, who won the series opener 10-8 on Monday. New York moved five games ahead of Cincinnati for the final National League wild card.
The American League Central-leading Tigers have lost seven of nine.
Alonso’s first homer was a 435-foot drive in the first inning that landed between the first and second row of shrubs behind the center-field wall. Soto and Alonso hit back-to-back solo shots in a six-run seventh that gave the Mets a 12-2 cushion.
Soto has 37 home runs in his first season with New York, including five homers in the past five games. Alonso’s second homer was his 33rd of the year.
Jeff McNeil drove in three runs and finished with three of New York’s 17 hits. Brandon Nimmo and Brett Baty also had three hits for the Mets.
Information from The Associated Press and ESPN Research was used in this report.
Sports
Welcome to September! Ranking the MLB playoff races that will rule the final month
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8 hours agoon
September 3, 2025By
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David SchoenfieldSep 1, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Covers MLB for ESPN.com
- Former deputy editor of Page 2
- Been with ESPN.com since 1995
With each postseason expansion throughout MLB’s history, the value of division races has diluted. In the wild-card era, you can finish in second place — or even third or fourth — and still win the World Series.
Does that make September less exciting? There’s no doubt it brings more teams and more fans into the mix. And a big game is still a big game, even if there is slightly less tension in a Red Sox-Yankees or Mets-Phillies series than there otherwise might be if both teams already know they’re going to make the playoffs.
Thus, we’re mostly left with wild-card races and battles for seeding to occupy our time and scoreboard watching. That still offers plenty of fun, still makes September the best month on the baseball calendar, and there’s still a lot of sweating going on when your closer walks two batters in the ninth trying to protect a one-run lead. The 12 postseason slots aren’t completely locked up, so if you’re a fan of the Mets or Mariners, you can’t breathe easily just yet — not until a playoff spot is clinched and the champagne uncorked.
September is here, believe it or not. We have races to decide. Let’s rank their potential excitement level over the final month.
1. National League West race
Standings: Los Angeles Dodgers up 2 games on San Diego Padres
What’s at stake: This is the best rivalry going on in the majors right now. The teams don’t like each other, the fans don’t like each other, and there’s still that element of David trying to knock out Goliath as the Padres seek their first division title since 2006 and their first World Series title ever. The teams have met three times in the NL Division Series since 2020 — with the Dodgers winning in 2020 and 2024 and the Padres victorious in 2022 — and with another rematch possible, home-field advantage could be key.
Do the Dodgers need to win the division? No, they will still be more focused on getting the pitching staff healthy and ready for October than on getting consumed in the race to win the division. It would probably mean more to the Padres, who want to finally beat their I-5 rivals in something besides that one playoff series. On the other hand, San Diego is probably a little better equipped for a short wild-card series, as it can ride its bullpen for the two or three games.
Series to watch: Somehow, the schedule-makers thought it would be a good idea to not have the Dodgers playing the Padres in September. The Dodgers finish with a road trip to Arizona and Seattle while the Padres end at home against Milwaukee and Arizona. The Dodgers won the season series, so they own the tiebreaker.
Dodgers player to watch: Blake Snell has been a notable second-half pitcher in his career and has a 2.54 ERA since returning from the injured list in August, but he hasn’t been quite as dominant as when he gets on one of his patented hot streaks (such as the second half last year, when he had a 1.45 ERA and .130 average allowed). The Dodgers won last season despite a beat-up rotation that wasn’t even all that effective in the playoffs. But the bullpen has been nowhere near as strong this season as in 2024, so they’ll need that dominant version of Snell down the stretch and in October.
Padres player to watch: Ramon Laureano has been the team’s best hitter since he was acquired at the trade deadline, slashing .305/.354/.581 with seven home runs and 23 RBIs in 28 games. He helped keep the offense afloat in August as Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr. each hit just one home run on the month and Jackson Merrill has been injured. Laureano’s production has been great, but the Padres need more power from their big two.
2. American League East
Standings: Toronto Blue Jays up 3 games on New York Yankees, 3.5 games on Boston Red Sox
What’s at stake: This has been the wildest division race all season. The Blue Jays were eight games back in late May when they fell under .500 but have now held first place since July 3. The Yankees fell as many as 6.5 games back in August before cleaning up against the Washington Nationals and Chicago White Sox this past week to draw closer. The Red Sox were 41-44 on June 30, but only the Brewers have a better record since that date. The Yankees have a plus-134 run differential, whereas it’s plus-56 for the Blue Jays and plus-102 for the Red Sox, so you wonder why they’re even in this position. However, New York is 5-8 in extra-inning games (the Blue Jays are 8-4) and hasn’t played well against Toronto and Boston (5-15).
Series to watch: Blue Jays at Yankees (Friday-Sunday); Red Sox at Blue Jays (Sept. 23-25); Yankees at Red Sox (Sept. 12-14). All three season series have already been clinched: The Blue Jays over the Red Sox and Yankees and the Red Sox over the Yankees. That will leave the Yankees on the short end of any tiebreaker.
Blue Jays player to watch: Toronto acquired Shane Bieber at the deadline even though he was still completing his minor league rehab from Tommy John surgery. He has allowed three runs in two starts for the Blue Jays, striking out 15 with no walks in 11⅓ innings. It’s just two starts, but he looks like he did when he was the Cleveland ace, plus he has allowed the Jays to go to a six-man rotation. Don’t be surprised if he ends up as the Game 1 starter in the postseason.
Yankees player to watch: Aaron Judge is still probably the MVP favorite, but after missing 10 days with a flexor strain in his right elbow, he hasn’t been quite the same, hitting .241/.417/.506 with six home runs and 12 RBIs in 24 games in August. Though those are still good numbers, it seems fair to call it a slight slump by Judge’s recent historic standards — and it’s not the same level of production as before his injury. He also still hasn’t played the field, which limits the red-hot Giancarlo Stanton to pinch-hitting duties when the Yankees are on the road (manager Aaron Boone has been willing to play Stanton in right field at Yankee Stadium, where there’s less ground to cover).
Red Sox player to watch: Sixty-nine games into his career, 21-year-old rookie Roman Anthony has made it clear: He’s going to be a big star. Sure, he can cut his strikeout rate a bit, but he already has A-plus plate discipline and has the second-highest hard-hit percentage in the majors behind only Kyle Schwarber. And Anthony is also quickly learning to lift the ball, slugging six home runs in August after hitting one each in June and July.
3. National League race for No. 2 seed
Standings: Milwaukee Brewers hold No. 1 seed with 5.5-game cushion; Philadelphia Phillies up 1 game on Dodgers, 3 games on Padres
What’s at stake: The Phillies hold a comfortable lead over the Mets in the NL East, so they have about a 90% chance of winning the division, but Philadelphia is neck and neck with the pair of NL West rivals for the second-best record in the NL. Home-field advantage isn’t a must to win a World Series — we’ve seen wild-card teams take it all, such as the Rangers in 2023 when they were the fifth seed in the AL — but the Phillies have an extreme home/road split this season, going 45-23 in Philadelphia and 34-35 elsewhere. They’re hitting .275 with an .808 OPS at home, .239 with a .693 OPS on the road.
Series to watch: Phillies at Dodgers (Sept. 15-17). The Phillies finish with a six-game homestand against the Miami Marlins and Minnesota Twins, which looks like a favorable way to end the season.
Phillies player to watch: Kyle Schwarber, of course, and Cristopher Sanchez as he takes over the role of staff ace from the injured Zack Wheeler. But the bullpen has been the issue the past two postseasons for the Phillies, which puts Jhoan Duran on the spot as well. Acquired from the Twins at the trade deadline to take over as closer, Duran has mostly done the job, but he blew one save against the Nationals, picking up the loss, and then lost another game against the Mets when he allowed four straight hits without getting an out.
4. American League race for top two seeds
Standings: Detroit Tigers hold No. 1 seed and are up 0.5 games on Blue Jays, 3.5 games on Yankees, 4 games on Red Sox and 4.5 games on Astros
What’s at stake: Bragging rights? Momentum heading into the postseason? Home-field advantage? Sure, all those things are nice, and the Tigers have a notable home/road split (44-25 versus 36-33), so securing that top seed, which they’ve held much of the way in the AL, would be the final touch on an excellent regular season. Still, if you’re manager A.J. Hinch, you’re not going to burn out your rotation in September just to get that top seed. If the Astros climb closer to the Tigers and Blue Jays, however, it will get more interesting as teams want to avoid that wild-card series if possible.
Series to watch: Tigers at Yankees (Sept. 9-11); Tigers at Red Sox (Sept. 26-28); Yankees at Astros (Tuesday-Thursday); Astros at Blue Jays (Sept. 9-11)
Tigers player to watch: The Tigers have been searching for a No. 2 starter behind Tarik Skubal all year. Jack Flaherty has been inconsistent all season and had three starts in August where he allowed five or more runs. Casey Mize has a 7.20 ERA over his past eight starts. Chris Paddack? No. Maybe it’s 41-year-old vet Charlie Morton, who has a 4.61 ERA in his five starts with Detroit, as he has mixed in three excellent outings with two bad ones (although he fanned 10 in one of the bad ones). No matter what, there are going to be a lot of bullpen games for the Tigers in the playoffs when Skubal isn’t pitching, especially since the pen was much better in August after struggling in June and July (and adding some depth at the deadline).
5. American League West
Standings: Houston Astros up 2 games on Seattle Mariners
What’s at stake: The Mariners haven’t won a division title since … hold on here, scrolling through the years on Baseball-Reference.com … that’s right, the 116-win season in 2001. The Mariners made some weird pact with the baseball gods that season, which for some reason didn’t include them making the World Series after their historic regular season but did include them not making the postseason again until 2022. That’s right: They remain the only franchise never to appear in the Fall Classic. Winning the division would increase their odds just a bit and allow them to set their rotation for the ALDS.
Series to watch: Mariners at Astros (Sept. 19-21). The season series is tied 5-5, so the winner of this series gets that crucial tiebreaker edge. Of note: The Mariners have lost five consecutive road series and are 1-6-1 (they split a four-game series) in their past eight. The Astros have managed to keep their grip on first place despite going 12-13 in July and 13-15 in August. They’ve won every full-season AL West title going back to 2017.
Astros player to watch: Yordan Alvarez returned last week after being out since early May with a hand injury. He homered in his second game back and didn’t strike out in his first five games. The Astros have even started him twice in left field, allowing them to give Jose Altuve a DH day. Bottom line: If Alvarez is producing, a below-average offense suddenly looks at least like an average — or better-than-average — offense. With Alvarez, Altuve and Carlos Correa, it’s 2019 or 2021 all over again, two seasons that ended with the Astros playing in the World Series.
Mariners player to watch: How much does Cal Raleigh have left in the tank? He’s sitting on 50 home runs but also hit .194 in July and .173 in August. He’s still doing damage with the long ball and has had 17 home runs and 36 RBIs over the two months, but he’s not carrying the offense as he did in the first half.
6. American League Wild Card
Standings: Mariners hold third wild-card spot and are up 2.5 games on Kansas City Royals, 3 games on Texas Rangers and 4 games on Cleveland Guardians
What’s at stake: By no means are the Mariners out of the AL West race against Houston, but they also haven’t played well enough to pull away in the wild-card fight, even after everyone declared them a sure-thing playoff team following the acquisitions of Eugenio Suarez and Josh Naylor at the deadline. But given Seattle’s recent history of just missing the playoffs — two wins short in 2021, one short in 2023 and 2024 — Mariners fans are understandably nervous about blowing it, especially with the Royals and the Rangers refusing to go away.
Series to watch: Mariners at Royals (Sept. 16-18); Royals at Guardians (Sept. 8-10); Rangers at Guardians (Sept. 26-28). The Royals finished one game ahead of the Mariners for a wild-card spot last season, so this looks like the key series. The Mariners have one three-game series in Houston starting Sept. 19. If they can survive this current road trip — they just went 1-2 against Cleveland and now head to Tampa and Atlanta — that series looms large as well.
Royals player to watch: Is it too late to toss Bobby Witt Jr. into the Judge/Raleigh MVP debate? He’s making a late run with his outstanding all-around game and just had his best month of the season. With Vinnie Pasquantino mashing home runs and some trade acquisitions chipping in, Kansas City is peaking at the right time. The Royals have played well for two months now and have a pretty soft schedule for the final month.
Rangers player to watch: The Rangers looked out of it, and they’re going to be without Nathan Eovaldi for the rest of the season — and likely Marcus Semien as well — and Corey Seager for some period of time following an appendectomy. But they just won three series in a row. Without Eovaldi, Jack Leiter has to continue to pitch well: He has a 2.88 ERA over his past 11 starts and just tossed back-to-back excellent games.
Guardians player to watch: Cleveland is barely hanging in there, taking two of three against the Mariners as Kyle Manzardo hit big home runs in wins Friday and Saturday. He’s hitting .273/.362/.545 since July 12, giving Cleveland a much-needed power source other than Jose Ramirez.
7. National League East and NL Wild Card
Standings: Phillies up 6 games on Mets in division; Mets up 4 games on Cincinnati Reds in wild card
What’s at stake: The Mets temporarily made the division race interesting again after sweeping Philadelphia early last week but then lost three of four at home to the Marlins. That’s unacceptable if you want to win the division. The Reds continue to falter, so the Mets’ wild-card spot looks reasonably safe, though they are just .500 since May 1.
Series to watch: Mets at Phillies (Sept. 8-11); Mets at Reds (Friday-Sunday). With next week’s four-game series, the NL East remains in play even though it would take an epic New York comeback combined with a Phillies collapse for the Mets to win the division. They’ve already clinched the season series over the Phillies with a 7-2 advantage. Meanwhile, the Reds have a chance to put pressure on the Mets with a three-game series in Cincinnati before New York’s trip to Philadelphia.
Mets player to watch: Nolan McLean and Jonah Tong. The Mets’ rotation has scuffled for a while, so suddenly the season rests heavily on their two prized rookie starters. McLean won his first three starts, allowing just two runs in 20⅓ innings. Tong, who led minor league starters in ERA and strikeouts, beat the Marlins in his debut Friday, striking out six in five innings with no walks while showcasing the changeup that allowed him to dominate the minors.
Reds player to watch: What’s happening with Elly De La Cruz‘s power? He hasn’t homered since July 31 and has just one in his past 58 games.
8. National League Central
Standings: Brewers up 6.5 games on Chicago Cubs
What’s at stake: This is another David vs. Goliath matchup. Milwaukee, of course, is Goliath. The Cubs won the NL Central in the COVID-shortened season of 2020 but haven’t taken a full-season division title since 2017. Given the Brewers’ lead with no signs of faltering, the odds are slim that Chicago can chase them down.
Series to watch: The two teams are done for their season series, and the Cubs took it 7-6, so at least they own the tiebreaker.
Brewers player to watch: Closer Trevor Megill landed on the IL a few days ago with a flexor strain in his elbow after blowing three saves since mid-August, so Abner Uribe takes over. If the Cubs have a chance to catch the Brewers, it might be because the Milwaukee pen, which has been worked hard, burns out in September, especially with the Brewers in the midst of playing 19 games in 18 days.
Cubs player to watch: Kyle Tucker slumped as he played through a hairline fracture in his right hand for two months. He finally broke out with three home runs in two games and has hit over .400 his past nine games. The Cubs’ offense was horrid in August — Pete Crow-Armstrong also struggled — and they’ll need Tucker and the rest of the lineup to rebound in September.
9. American League Central
Standings: Tigers up 9.5 games on Royals
What’s at stake: This one is all but over — though, it’s not impossible for the Royals. The Mets blew a seven-game lead in 2007 with 17 games to play. The 1995 Angels entered September with a 7.5-game lead and lost the division in a tiebreaker game. The 2009 Tigers were up seven games on Sept. 6 and blew it. The 2011 Braves had an 8.5-game lead in the wild-card race at the start of September and missed the playoffs. And during that same season, the Red Sox were leading the Yankees in the AL East and nine games up on the Rays — who would catch them on the final day of the season to win the wild card. So … you never know.
Series to watch: The Tigers and Royals are done playing each other, with Detroit winning the season series 9-4.
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