
Grading college football’s new coordinators, from Matt Patricia to Tom Allen
More Videos
Published
21 hours agoon
By
admin-
Adam RittenbergSep 30, 2025, 06:52 AM ET
Close- College football reporter; joined ESPN in 2008. Graduate of Northwestern University.
When Miami fell short of the College Football Playoff despite having the nation’s top quarterback and offense in 2024, coach Mario Cristobal needed a new voice for the defense and found one in Corey Hetherman, a respected coordinator from Minnesota whose strong work had gone mostly under the radar.
When Florida State crashed out to a 2-10 finish in 2024, coach Mike Norvell’s full sweep of the program included two attention-grabbing coordinator hires in Gus Malzahn (offense) and Tony White (defense).
Hetherman, Malzahn and White aren’t the only reasons this week’s Miami-Florida State game has regained some juice, but their impact has been noticeable. Miami ranks ninth nationally in points allowed (11.5 PPG) and tied for eighth against the run (76.3 YPG). Florida State leads the nation in both scoring (53 PPG) and total offense (600 YPG), and its defense entered Friday’s game at Virginia ranked in the top 25 in several major categories.
Other teams also are witnessing the impact of first-year coordinators, from positive to concerning to somewhere in between. Oklahoma’s offseason makeover on offense included adding not only quarterback John Mateer from Washington State, but also his playcaller there in Ben Arbuckle. Joey McGuire brought in playcallers Shiel Wood (defense) and Mack Leftwich (offense) to Texas Tech to accelerate the ascent of an improved roster with championship aspirations.
“You’re like, ‘Hey, we’re not rebuilding. You’re coming in and we’ve been in a bowl game the last three years, won two of the three,'” McGuire told ESPN. “‘You need to understand we’re putting all this money in. You’ve got to be ready to go.'”
Meanwhile, Notre Dame is still trying to reach its defensive standard under first-year coordinator Chris Ash.
Five full weeks of the 2025 season have provided enough evidence to evaluate how the first-year coordinators are performing. Here are my nearly midterm grades for coordinators who are shining, struggling or somewhere in between. (Note: I evaluated only coordinators joining returning head coaches, as opposed to those on entirely new staffs.)
Miami defensive coordinator Corey Hetherman
After Miami blew leads and allowed a total of 83 points in losses to Syracuse and Iowa State to close the 2024 season, Cristobal made a necessary coordinator change and hired Hetherman, who at Minnesota had overseen the No. 5 total defense and No. 9 scoring defense in the FBS.
Hetherman inherited an undeniably talented group but had to maximize its ability. Established stars such as Rueben Bain Jr. are thriving — 2 sacks, 3.5 tackles for loss, 1 interception, 1 forced fumble — and transfers Mohamed Toure (Rutgers) and Jakobe Thomas (Tennessee) have helped right away.
Miami is bottling up the run, allowing just 2.6 yards per rush with a long of 30 yards. Take away Notre Dame’s 17-point fourth quarter in the opener, and Miami has allowed 29 points in the other 15 quarters it has played.
“He’s an elite teacher, and his care factor, it just screams out of him,” Cristobal told ESPN of Hetherman. “Our guys have learned a lot of football. They’re playing with physicality and playing fast, and communicating at a much higher level. We’re just consistently getting better on that side of the ball.”
Grade: A
Ohio State defensive coordinator Matt Patricia
Jim Knowles’ departure from the national champion Buckeyes to Big Ten rival Penn State seemed like a real blow, and Ohio State hiring Patricia as his replacement seemed like a head-scratcher. Patricia had not worked in college football since 2003 and last served as a defensive coordinator for the New England Patriots in 2017. Despite winning three Super Bowls with the Patriots, Patricia arrived in Columbus with some question marks.
He made an excellent first impression by guiding the Buckeyes’ defense to a near shutout of Texas and quarterback Arch Manning in the season opener. Texas didn’t score until 3:28 remained, and Manning struggled against Patricia’s scheme. Ohio State’s defense delivered an arguably more impressive performance Saturday at Washington, keeping the Huskies out of the end zone and holding them to 15 first downs and 234 total yards.
Despite inheriting a unit with mostly new starters in the front seven, Patricia has watched Caden Curry, Arvell Reese, Kayden McDonald and others get off to fast starts. The Buckeyes lead the FBS in fewest points allowed (5.5 PPG) and rank eighth in allowing 3.99 yards per play.
“The guys just love Matt,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day told ESPN this spring. “He’s been a defensive coordinator for Super Bowl teams. He’s been an offensive [assistant]. He’s been very much involved, like a GM. One of the reasons why we brought him in was because of his background of doing multiple things on defense that fit the skill set of the guys that we have.”
Linebacker Sonny Styles echoed Day, saying of Patricia, “He’s able to adapt to whatever personnel he has. You get to experience a lot of different things, and you get to display a multiplicity of abilities.”
Grade: A
Texas Tech defensive coordinator Shiel Wood and offensive coordinator Mack Leftwich
The offseason buzz at Texas Tech revolved around its portal additions and the cost to bring them in, but the new playcallers McGuire would hire also impacted an all-in season for the Red Raiders. He had to replace offensive coordinator Zach Kittley, who became the youngest head coach (33) in the FBS when he left for Florida Atlantic. Texas Tech also needed a new coordinator for a defense that had slipped to 126th nationally in yards allowed and 121st in points allowed.
McGuire looked within the league for Wood, who was at Houston and had previous coordinator experience at Tulane, Troy and Army. Wood inherited a unit returning standouts such as Jacob Rodriguez but also featuring an influx of high-priced transfers, especially in the front seven, including Romello Height (Georgia Tech), David Bailey (Stanford) and Lee Hunter (UCF). So far, Wood is pulling all of the right strings, as Texas Tech is allowing 11.3 points per game and just 3.7 yards per play, both ranking in the top 10. Rodriguez has been all over the field, and Bailey and Height have combined for six sacks and 11 quarterback pressures.
“I wanted a guy that was a multiple, that wasn’t just a three-down guy, wasn’t just a four-down guy, who could fit our current players in and then the guys we were going to bring in,” McGuire said. “And I wanted somebody extremely detailed and organized. If anybody asks me what Shiel Wood is like, I’d say he’s extremely detailed and organized and then, boom, he’s got all kinds of juice for the players to rally around.”
Leftwich is a lifelong Texan who never worked at Texas Tech but had links to the school and the Mike Leach Air Raid legacy through Eric Morris, whom Leftwich worked under at Incarnate Word. Like Kittley, Leftwich is young (30) but accomplished and is working with a mix of returnees, including quarterback Behren Morton, and several notable offensive line transfers. Texas Tech is averaging 52 points per game and 7.8 yards per play.
“I wanted to still keep our Texas Tech identity whenever it comes to offense, but also, there’s so many little additions to what he does that makes it really tough to defend,” McGuire said. “One thing that makes Mack different, you’ve got some of the wide splits like Art [Briles] used to do at Baylor. You got some run-and-shoot and the stuff we do. Then, at the end of the day, his dad’s an offensive line coach, so he’ll tell you, we don’t run the football, he’s not welcome to Thanksgiving.”
Grade: A
Florida State offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn
Norvell wasn’t going to give up offensive playcalling to just anybody. Malzahn mentored Norvell early in his coaching career, and the chance to reunite at Florida State made sense for both.
“I feel like I got one of the best playcallers in the country,” Norvell told ESPN this summer.
The Malzahn move paid off right away as Florida State consistently stayed a step ahead of Alabama in a 31-17 upset to open the season. FSU averaged 6.1 yards per play and converted 5 of 12 third-down chances and both of its fourth-down opportunities, including a fourth-and-1 from the Seminoles’ 34-yard line with a 7-point lead in the fourth quarter.
Florida State is averaging 53 points per game and 8.2 yards per play under Malzahn, whose creativeness has repeatedly shown up. There were some missteps in Friday’s loss at Virginia, as Florida State committed three turnovers and couldn’t convert several opportunities in Cavaliers territory. But Malzahn’s usage of quarterback Tommy Castellanos, wide receiver Duce Robinson and others has been effective.
Grade: A-
Utah offensive coordinator Jason Beck
The Beck-Devon Dampier package deal from New Mexico didn’t generate as much national attention as the Arbuckle-Mateer pairing at Oklahoma, but it had the potential to be just as significant, given Utah’s offensive struggles the past two seasons. Under Beck, Dampier earned first-team All-Mountain West honors in 2024 and led the league in both total offense (3,934 yards) and yards per carry (7.52).
“Me and my defensive coordinator, Morgan Scalley, who’s the head coach-in-waiting, conducted a national search, and when all was said and done, we both were on the exact same page: This is the guy,” head coach Kyle Whittingham said of Beck this summer. “Then, when Devon expressed interest to transfer by going in the portal, we said, ‘It’s natural, it’s a natural fit. Two for one.'”
Utah’s offense started strong, averaging 45.7 points in the first three weeks. Dampier was an instant success, recording seven touchdown passes during the span and twice eclipsing 80 rushing yards. But the Utes struggled in their first major test against Texas Tech, as Dampier twice was intercepted and didn’t account for a touchdown. The Utes did not reach the end zone until 10:22 remained and were outgained 484-263 in a 34-10 home loss.
Dampier and the Utah offense bounced back nicely Saturday at West Virginia — 48 points, 532 yards, 33 first downs, career-high four passing touchdowns for Dampier — but the next two games against Arizona State (home) and BYU (road) will reveal a lot.
Grade: B+
Oklahoma offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle
The Sooners looked to the Palouse and Washington State to fix their slumping offense, adding Arbuckle and quarterback Mateer in the top offseason package deal. Arbuckle was just 27 when he landed the OC job at WSU, becoming the youngest coordinator in the Power 5 at the time. He helped develop Cam Ward and Mateer, lightly recruited quarterbacks from his native state of Texas, into national stars.
Arbuckle and Mateer, who is expected to miss about a month with a broken bone in his right hand, have helped the Sooners to a 4-0 start that includes notable home wins against Michigan and Auburn. Oklahoma isn’t an offensive juggernaut, ranking 59th nationally in scoring, but the Sooners are averaging 305 passing yards per game and have scored on all 17 of their trips to the red zone.
“He’s done a fantastic job from leadership, energy, developing an identity,” coach Brent Venables said of Arbuckle. “He’s a tough guy, demands great discipline and accountability, brings out the best in our guys, knows what he wants to do.”
Grade: B+
Florida State defensive coordinator Tony White
The Malzahn move made waves throughout the sport because power-conference head coaches rarely leave for coordinator spots, but Florida State’s hiring of White also qualified as a significant coup. White had performed well at Nebraska, an ascending program, but left to try to revive an FSU team that had slipped to 87th nationally in points allowed.
Like Malzahn, White had an immediate effect. White comes from the Rocky Long coaching tree and employs a variation of Long’s 3-3-5 scheme. Florida State was the more physical defense in the opening win against Alabama, holding the Tide to 87 rushing yards while allowing just 6 of 17 third-down conversions and 2 of 5 fourth-down conversions.
Players such as safeties Earl Little Jr. and Ashlynd Barker have shined under White.
“One of the things that’s most attractive for me bringing him here, is that you’ve seen so many different variations, the philosophy, the mindset, really it’s the style of play that I love more than anything else,” Norvell told ESPN. “He does a great job utilizing personnel and showcasing his playmakers, but the style of play is something that definitely holds true.”
White’s grade certainly was higher before Friday’s loss at Virginia, which often bullied Florida State’s defensive front despite being down several offensive linemen. Virginia converted 7 of 13 third-down chances and both of its fourth-down opportunities and scored 16 more points (46) than FSU had allowed in its first three games combined.
Grade: B+
Arizona defensive coordinator Danny Gonzales
When coach Brent Brennan’s much-anticipated first season at Arizona flopped, he replaced both primary coordinators and promoted Gonzales, the team’s linebackers coach and special teams coordinator, to oversee the defense. Gonzales had defensive coordinator experience from San Diego State and Arizona State before becoming head coach at New Mexico.
Despite Saturday’s reality-check loss at Iowa State, Arizona has made some progress on both sides of the ball.
The Wildcats have gone from 108th in scoring defense in 2024 to 25th, and from 105th in total defense to 17th. Led by Genesis Smith, six players already have interceptions this season.
“I’ve had to coach against Danny Gonzalez defenses for lots of years, so there was zero hesitation about what I thought he was capable of doing,” Brennan told ESPN. “Everybody’s on the same page. The standard is extremely high for how hard we play and how people execute.”
Grade: B+
Georgia Tech defensive coordinator Blake Gideon
Brent Key made a defensive coordinator change midway through his first year, then lost Tyler Santucci to the NFL after 2024, so he had an important choice to make ahead of a big 2025 season. Gideon had impressive credentials as a former Texas player and assistant, but his only coordinator experience came on special teams with Houston and Ole Miss.
So far, Gideon looks like a strong choice. Georgia Tech is allowing 190.4 pass yards per game and has nine defenders with multiple tackles for loss, led by senior defensive tackle Jordan van den Berg. The team is trying to become the first Georgia Tech defense since 2006 to allow fewer than 20 points per game.
Although the defense had a shaky start Saturday against Wake Forest, it allowed only six second-half points and secured the game-clinching interception on a 2-point try in overtime.
“They’ve taken on Blake’s personality,” Key told ESPN this spring. “He’s a fiery, roughneck guy. The first time I talked to him, we talked for an hour and 30, hour and 45 minutes, and just kind of hit it off. Then when he came and presented, it was very uncut, raw, just, ‘This is who I am. This is what I do, just how we’re going to do it.’ He’s been a really good addition.”
Grade: B
Penn State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles
Knowles is a difficult eval at this point. Penn State has faced only one significant — or even moderate — test and came up short Saturday against Oregon. The Nittany Lions allowed a total of 17 points in their first three games but faced the No. 90 and No. 130 offenses in the FBS in Florida International and Nevada, as well as FCS Villanova. Given the personnel Penn State brought back on defense, anything less than domination at home would sound the alarms.
Penn State made the biggest splash in the coordinator market — bringing Knowles to his home state from a national championship team within the Big Ten — specifically for games like Saturday night’s. Knowles’ defense started very strong, holding Oregon to three points in the first 42 minutes. But then the Ducks mounted consecutive touchdown drives of 80 and 75 yards.
The Nittany Lions had a chance to win in the first overtime after striking first, but they couldn’t stop Dante Moore, who then fired the game-winning touchdown pass in the second extra session. Penn State never sacked Moore or forced a turnover and finished with just one tackle for loss.
Knowles is arguably the nation’s best defensive architect, and Penn State should be fine on that side of the ball. But the grade is weighted down by the loss to Oregon.
Grade: B-
Arizona offensive coordinator Seth Doege
The Wildcats finished 114th nationally in scoring last season despite having a top-10 NFL draft pick in wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan, quarterback Noah Fifita and others. Brennan brought in Doege, a former Texas Tech quarterback under Mike Leach who helped Marshall to a Sun Belt championship in his only season as offensive coordinator. Fifita has been solid under Doege so far, averaging 241.3 passing yards per game with eight touchdowns and two interceptions.
Arizona’s run game has surged with Ismail Mahdi and Quincy Craig combining to average 7.3 yards per carry. The Iowa State loss certainly was a setback, as Fifita twice was picked off, but Arizona still had decent overall numbers (20 first downs, 360 total yards).
“When we went through the process of interviewing some people, Seth really stood out with his confidence, his command of what you know he wants to do schematically, and then his willingness to adapt and adjust according to the strengths of your personnel,” Brennan said. “He and Noah have built an incredible relationship. Coach Doege played the position, played it at a high level, and he himself had multiple coaches, so he’s able to kind of walk Noah through the process of all those things.”
Grade: B-
Michigan offensive coordinator Chip Lindsey
Although Lindsey had never coached in the North and lacked any connections to Sherrone Moore and the Michigan staff, his hiring still made some sense because of his track record with quarterbacks and the passing game. Michigan’s passing game finished 2024 ranked above only the service academies — Navy, Air Force and Army — and needed someone to revive the passing attack and mentor freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood, the nation’s No. 1 recruit.
Michigan has improved a bit and Underwood has flashed brilliance, but the freshman was a combined 21-of-46 for 247 passing yards in road games against Oklahoma (loss) and Nebraska (win). The Wolverines are running the ball very well with Justice Haynes and Jordan Marshall, but ultimately their success this season hinges on Underwood’s development and his ability to be a big factor against the tough opponents still upcoming, including USC, Washington, Michigan State and Ohio State.
Grade: B-
Clemson defensive coordinator Tom Allen
Despite winning another ACC title last season, Clemson’s defense had become ordinary, finishing 42nd nationally in points allowed and 85th against the run. A new voice was needed and Allen, who helped Penn State to the CFP semifinal in his only season as coordinator, made a lot of sense. Allen and coach Dabo Swinney connected very well, and Allen had spent some time in the region as a high school coach in Florida and later as South Florida’s defensive coordinator.
The defense certainly hasn’t been the biggest reason Clemson sits at 1-3, outside the CFP picture and most likely the ACC race. Allen’s group kept things close in an opening loss to LSU, allowing only three points in the first 26 minutes. Clemson struggled to stop Georgia Tech quarterback Haynes King in a Week 3 loss, but its overall defensive performance wasn’t bad. But the defense struggled from the start Sept. 20 against Syracuse, surrendering 24 first-half points and 433 yards.
Clemson’s bigger problems seem to be with quarterback Cade Klubnik and the offense, but a defense filled with future NFL players needs a breakthrough soon.
Grade: C-
Notre Dame defensive coordinator Chris Ash
Ash was a somewhat surprising choice to replace Al Golden, the 2024 Broyles Award winner (nation’s top assistant) who returned to the Cincinnati Bengals as defensive coordinator. Although Ash had notable credentials — former Rutgers head coach, former defensive coordinator at four Power 4 programs — he hadn’t overseen a college defense since Texas in 2020.
“[The 2024 season] is over, the group of players is not the same and to just say we’re going to be able to do the exact same thing, probably not the right approach,” Ash told ESPN this spring. “To say we’re going to completely change everything was not the right approach, either. Let’s continue to build on the things that have been done. Let’s blend it with some things that we might need to do to fit our personnel, and then we take off and go.”
Unfortunately for Ash and the Irish, the defense saw a regression through its first three games. Notre Dame surrendered 41 points, 488 yards and 21.2 yards per completion in a home loss to Texas A&M — and constantly had Aggies wide receivers running free — then allowed four scoring drives of 58 yards or longer against Purdue.
Head coach Marcus Freeman has continued to back Ash, saying he won’t strip away playcalling duties and that the staff collectively must figure out why the unit isn’t executing correctly. The defense responded nicely Saturday against Taylen Green and a potent Arkansas offense, which finished with just 13 points and 15 first downs while turning over the ball twice.
Grade: D+
UCLA offensive coordinator Tino Sunseri
Sunseri was the only on-field assistant from Indiana’s 2024 team to leave, but the move made sense, as he became the primary offensive coordinator for the first time in his coaching career. The 36-year-old from a notable coaching family landed with a UCLA program that made the biggest splash in the spring transfer portal, landing quarterback Nico Iamaleava from CFP participant Tennessee.
But the excitement around UCLA’s season quickly faded. The Bruins were held to 10 points in two of their first three games, lopsided losses to Utah and New Mexico. Iamaleava had three touchdowns and three interceptions in the span, and only one Bruins player had a reception of longer than 21 yards. UCLA’s woes in the run game preceded Sunseri, but the team is averaging only 124.3 yards per game on the ground (105th nationally) with Iamaleava as the only player with more than 200 rushing yards for the season.
The winless Bruins have reached 20 points just once in their first four games.
Grade: D-
You may like
Sports
Snitker won’t return as Braves manager in 2026
Published
2 hours agoon
October 1, 2025By
admin
-
ESPN News Services
Oct 1, 2025, 10:56 AM ET
Brian Snitker, who guided the Braves to the 2021 World Series championship, will not return as manager after Atlanta failed to make the postseason for the first time since 2017.
The Braves announced the end of Snitker’s 10-year run as manager Wednesday, adding that he will remain with the organization in an advisory role in 2026.
Snitker informed the Braves of his decision Tuesday, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan.
Snitker, whose contract expired after this season, has been with the Braves organization in some capacity as a player, coach and manager since 1977.
He was named interim replacement to then-Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez in May 2016 and was elevated to the permanent role before the start of the 2017 season.
“I’ve teetered on the fence [about retirement],” Snitker said after the Braves’ final game on Sept. 28. “I’ve never been through this before. I wasn’t sure how to navigate it. I’ve talked to a lot of people who have been through it who got some good advice. I’ve just tried to stay in the moment and focus on today … As we’re sitting here right now, I still feel good.”
The Braves went 76-86 this season, finishing fourth in the National League East and ending a streak of seven consecutive postseason appearances. That run included six straight NL East titles from 2018-2023 and the franchise’s first World Series victory since 1995.
Braves general manager and president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos said on Sept. 8 that Snitker, 69, will be a “Brave for life” but did not go into detail about the manager’s future.
Snitker said he was encouraged by Atlanta’s play in the final month-plus of the season, which included a 10-game winning streak from Sept. 14 to Sept. 23.
The Braves went 811-668 in their eight-plus seasons under Snitker.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sports
MLB wild-card series Day 2: Keys to forcing Game 3, lineups and analysis
Published
2 hours agoon
October 1, 2025By
admin
Who is ready for some more MLB playoff action?
After the first day of the wild-card round featured close wins by the Detroit Tigers, San Diego Padres and Boston Red Sox, it’s time for the first potential elimination day of the 2025 postseason.
Who will stay alive and who will be sent packing?
We’ve got you covered with pregame lineups, keys to forcing Game 3, sights and sounds from the ballparks, and postgame takeaways as each Day 2 matchup ends.
Key links: Megapreview | Day 1 lessons | Bracket | Schedule
Jump to a matchup:
DET-CLE | SD-CHC | BOS-NYY | CIN-LAD
1 p.m. ET on ESPN
Tigers lead 1-0
Game 2 starters: Casey Mize vs. Tanner Bibee
What the Guardians need to do to force Game 3: Figure out a way to score some runs. Hey, at least they won’t be facing Tarik Skubal. The Guardians’ best bet is to have Jose Ramirez or Kyle Manzardo run into something, as Mize can be vulnerable to the home run at times (21 allowed in 149 innings). But maybe Cleveland can get Mize to run up his count and force AJ Hinch to go a little earlier than he would like to a Detroit bullpen that was shaky in September (2-8, 4.58 ERA) and especially struggled in close games. — David Schoenfield
Lineups
Tigers
1. Parker Meadows (L) CF
2. Gleyber Torres (R) 2B
3. Kerry Carpenter (L) DH
4. Spencer Torkelson (R) 1B
5. Riley Greene (L) LF
6. Wenceel Perez (S) RF
7. Dillon Dingler (R) C
8. Zach McKinstry (L) 3B
9. Javier Baez (R) SS
Guardians
1. Steven Kwan (L) LF
2. George Valera (L) RF
3. Jose Ramirez (S) 3B
4. Kyle Manzardo (L) DH
5. Bo Naylor (L) C
6. Gabriel Arias (R) SS
7. Chase DeLauter (L) CF
8. CJ Kayfus (L) 1B
9. Brayan Rocchio (S) 2B
3 p.m. ET on ABC
Cubs lead 1-0
Game 2 starters: Dylan Cease vs. Andrew Kittredge
What the Padres need to do to force Game 3: As dominant as the Cubs’ bullpen looked in Game 1, that suggests the Padres will need to take an early lead and hand the game to their bullpen while ahead. And that means getting a strong effort from Cease. But his home/away splits were pretty dramatic this year: Cease went 7-3 with a 3.61 ERA at home and 1-9 with a 5.58 ERA on the road. That ERA difference might be a little misleading, as his secondary stats are similar, other than a dip in his strikeout rate (12.2 K’s per nine at home, 10.8 on the road). Given the must-win nature for the Padres, Mike Shildt will have a quick hook anyway. But the Padres probably will need at least four innings from Cease — and probably with 0 or 1 in the runs allowed column. — Schoenfield
Lineups
Padres
TBD
Cubs
TBD
6 p.m. ET on ESPN
Red Sox lead 1-0
Game 2 starters: Brayan Bello vs. Carlos Rodon
What the Yankees need to do to force Game 3: The Yankees need Rodón to pitch deep into Game 3. For as well as Max Fried pitched in Game 1, the Yankees’ bullpen immediately imploded upon his exit, and the offense couldn’t recover against Garrett Crochet and Aroldis Chapman. The best way to avoid another letdown by the bullpen is to minimize its impact on the game, which would allow the group to rest up for a do-or-die Game 3. — Jorge Castillo
Lineups
Red Sox
TBD
Yankees
TBD
9 p.m. ET on ESPN
Dodgers lead 1-0
Game 2 starters: Zack Littell vs. Yoshinobu Yamamoto
What the Reds need to do to force Game 3: Well, not allowing five home runs is a good start. Look, this is going to be a difficult game against Yamamoto, who allowed just three runs over his final five starts of the regular season. The best hope for the Reds is a performance where Yamamoto struggles with his control, which rarely occurs but did happen in one September start when he walked six batters. That would lead to a high pitch count and a relatively early exit, allowing the Reds to get into the Dodgers’ bullpen — a unit that was certainly an issue for L.A. throughout the season and didn’t distinguish itself in the late innings of Game 1. — Schoenfield
Lineups
Reds
TBD
Dodgers
TBD
Sports
World Series Drought-Buster Watch: Which MLB playoff teams could end longest runs without titles?
Published
2 hours agoon
October 1, 2025By
admin
-
David SchoenfieldOct 1, 2025, 10:39 AM ET
Close- Covers MLB for ESPN.com
- Former deputy editor of Page 2
- Been with ESPN.com since 1995
Mathematical probability, in a perfectly equitable distribution of championships, means each MLB team would win a World Series once every 30 years. That is not the world we live in, of course, so many franchises have experienced long title droughts that have stretched into multiple decades. There is even one that has never appeared in the Fall Classic.
That establishes a super fun element to this year’s postseason. We have seven playoff teams who have gone longer than 30 years since their last World Series championship — including the Milwaukee Brewers and San Diego Padres, who have never won, and the Seattle Mariners, who have still never reached the World Series 48 years into their franchise history.
Maybe, just maybe, some team’s long-suffering fans will experience that euphoria of winning the final game of the season.
Yes, it’s the year of the World Series Drought-Buster Watch. Let’s look at those seven franchises, what went wrong through the years, and why this may finally be The Year.
Last World Series title: 1948
Last World Series appearance: 2016 (lost to the Cubs in seven games).
Closest call since then: Lost the 2024 ALCS to the Yankees in five games.
Three painful postseason moments:
-
Led Game 7 of the 1997 World Series against the Marlins 2-1 in the ninth inning, but the Marlins tied the score off closer Jose Mesa. In the bottom of the 11th, second baseman Tony Fernandez let a slow grounder hit by Florida’s Craig Counsell go under his glove for an error, setting up Edgar Renteria’s walk-off hit.
-
In Game 7 of the 2016 World Series against the Cubs, Rajai Davis’ three-run homer in the eighth miraculously tied the score, but the Cubs scored twice in the top of the 10th. Davis’ two-out single in the bottom of the inning made it 8-7, but Cleveland was left with light-hitting Michael Martinez at the plate with two outs and the World Series on the line. Terry Francona had inserted Martinez in the ninth inning to get a better outfield arm in the game when the Cubs got a runner to third base. Martinez hit a slow bouncer to third base to end the game.
-
The best Cleveland team ever, the 1995 squad with one of the greatest lineups of all time, loses the clinching Game 6 of the World Series 1-0 to Atlanta while registering just one hit with the only run of the game coming on a David Justice home run off reliever Jim Poole.
Why they haven’t won: Can’t win the big game.
No franchise has suffered more postseason agony, at least since the Red Sox broke through in 2004.Though the Cleveland franchise was certainly dreadful for most of the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s, it has been consistently competitive since 1995, making the postseason 15 times and ranking sixth in overall wins during that span.
But the Guardians are 2-8 in winner-take-all games, winning the first of those in the 1997 ALDS and beating the Tigers in Game 5 of last year’s ALDS, but losing eight in a row in between. Along the way, they blew:
-
A 2-0 lead in the 1999 ALDS, losing the final two games to Boston by scores of 23-7 and 12-8.
-
A 2-1 lead to Seattle in the 2001 ALDS.
-
A 3-1 lead to Boston in the 2007 ALCS, losing the final three games 7-1, 12-2 and 11-2.
-
A 3-1 lead in the 2016 World Series, losing the final two games at home.
-
A 2-0 lead to the Yankees in the 2017 ALDS.
-
A 2-1 lead to the Yankees in the 2022 ALDS.
In those six series, they had 16 chances to close out a series and went 0-16.
Why this could be the year: Cleveland has certainly had better and more glamorous teams than this one. Indeed, with a negative run differential on the season, this is one of the weakest teams ever to make the postseason. The Guardians struggle to score runs. But they can pitch — and the pitching is peaking at the right time. In going 18-4 to close out the regular season, they allowed just 45 runs in 22 games, allowing two or fewer runs in 17 of those.
This team also doesn’t have the burden of expectations like those superstar-laden squads of the late ’90s, or even the 2016 and 2017 squads, which won 94 and 102 games, respectively. On the other hand, if we look at the teams who broke long World Series droughts in the past 20 years, they were all powerhouse clubs: the 2004 Red Sox (98 wins), the 2005 White Sox (99 wins), the 2016 Cubs (103 wins), the 2017 Astros (101 wins). Even the 2023 Rangers, while essentially a one-year fluke and winners of just 90 games, still posted a run differential of plus-165.
But in this year of unpredictability, maybe it’s simply Cleveland’s year.
Milwaukee Brewers
Last World Series title: None (franchise debuted in 1969, moved to Milwaukee in 1970).
Last World Series appearance: 1982 (lost to the Cardinals in seven games).
Closest call since then: Lost the 2018 NLCS to the Dodgers in seven games.
Three painful postseason moments:
-
Leading 3-1 in the bottom of the sixth inning in Game 7 of the 1982 World Series, the Cardinals load the bases with one out. Keith Hernandez hits a two-run single off Bob McClure and George Hendrick follows with a go-ahead single as the Cardinals go on to a 6-3 win. Brewers fans will always wonder what the outcome might have been if Hall of Fame reliever Rollie Fingers, who got injured in September, had not missed the World Series.
-
Pete Alonso‘s three-run, go-ahead home run in the ninth inning off Devin Williams in last year’s Game 3 of the wild-card series.
-
Leading the Nationals 3-1 in the bottom of the eighth of the 2019 wild-card game, Josh Hader loads the bases with a hit batter, single and walk. With two outs, Juan Soto singles to right field and rookie Trent Grisham overruns the ball, allowing all three runners to score.
Why they haven’t won: Lack of offense has led to early playoff exits.
For a long time, the Brewers were just bad. They didn’t have a winning season from 1993 to 2006. Current owner Mark Attanasio bought the team from the Selig family in 2005, however, and after a breakthrough season in 2008, the Brewers have mostly been competitive since, despite the challenges of playing in MLB’s smallest market. The Prince Fielder-Ryan Braun teams were built around offense, but the teams under managers Craig Counsell and now Pat Murphy have centered more on pitching, defense, speed and doing the little things well.
While Christian Yelich was an MVP in 2018 and runner-up in 2019, the recent teams have often lacked one true offensive star to anchor the lineup. That’s one reason the Brewers have had trouble scoring enough runs in the postseason, and that has led to losses in that 2019 wild-card game and wild-card series in 2020, 2023 and 2024. They were in the NLDS in 2021, but scored just six runs in four games, including two shutouts. Overall, the Brewers have gone 2-10 in the playoffs since 2019 entering this year and have hit just .229/.290/.351.
Why this could be the year: Even though the Brewers still don’t have that superstar hitter and rank below average in home runs, this is a deep, good offensive team. Only the Yankees and Dodgers scored more runs during the regular season. Only the Blue Jays struck out less among the playoff teams. And the Brewers do have guys who can hit home runs: Yelich has had his best power season since 2019; Brice Turang has slugged over .500 in the second half; Jackson Chourio can hit it out; and William Contreras hit nine home runs in August, so if he gets hot at the right time, he can help carry a lineup.
The Brewers also earned the No. 1 overall seed and have played well at home, with a 51-29 record. That could be a nice advantage. And even without the injured Trevor Megill, this is a strong bullpen with hard-throwing Abner Uribe capable of closing down leads. The Brewers had the best record for a reason: They’ve quieted skeptics and have remained the most consistent team all season long.
San Diego Padres
Last World Series title: None (franchise debuted in 1969).
Last World Series appearance: 1998 (lost to the Yankees in four games).
Closest call since then: Lost the 2022 NLCS to the Phillies in five games.
Three painful postseason moments:
-
Game 1 of the 1998 World Series is tied 5-5 with two outs and the bases loaded in the bottom of the seventh. Mark Langston appears to strike out Tino Martinez on a 2-2 fastball right at the knees, but umpire Rich Garcia calls it a ball. Martinez belts the next pitch for a grand slam.
-
Trying to stay alive in the 2022 NLCS and send the series back to San Diego, the Padres lead the Phillies 3-2 in the bottom of the eighth. With a runner on first, Bryce Harper fouls off three fastballs from Robert Suarez, spits on a changeup, then belts a 99 mph heater over the fence in left field for the series-winning home run.
-
Up two games to one in last year’s NLDS against the hated Dodgers, the Padres are shut out in the final two games. The final 19 batters in Game 5 are retired in order as the Dodgers win the series clincher 2-0.
Why they haven’t won: Until the late Peter Seidler became chairman, the Padres never had owners completely invested in winning. Since 2020 they’ve tried hard to get over the hump — but haven’t.
The Padres’ tormented history has featured periodic bouts of success — a surprise World Series team in 1984 and another in 1998 — but mostly a lot of losing. Under Tom Werner, there was the infamous teardown in 1993 when an order to reduce payroll resulted in the trades of Fred McGriff and Gary Sheffield. From 2007 through 2019, they made the playoffs, finishing over .500 just two of those years. But a rebuild in the late 2010s combined with an infusion of cash under Seidler has led to fun and competitive teams since 2020, with big crowds and now four playoff appearances in six years.
In two of those three years, they’ve met their archrival Dodgers, beating them in the 2022 NLDS, but losing in 2020 and then last year’s frustrating NLDS. The Padres’ offense seems to go cold at the wrong time — Manny Machado has not been a great postseason hitter for them and Juan Soto didn’t have a good one in his one postseason with the Padres in 2022 (and Fernando Tatis Jr. was out that season).
Why this could be the year: Bullpen, bullpen, bullpen. The Padres have perhaps the best one in the majors, even without injured All-Star Jason Adam. Suarez and Mason Miller provide a late-game pair of flamethrowers, Adrian Morejon is one of the best lefty relievers in the game, Jeremiah Estrada is a strikeout machine. and there is more depth beyond those four. Nick Pivetta had a terrific year to lead the rotation, and Dylan Cease, despite a down year, has the strikeout stuff that could play well in October.
The question: Can they hit enough home runs to score enough runs? A.J. Preller did improve the offense with the trade deadline acquisitions of Ramon Laureano (who is out with a fractured finger), Ryan O’Hearn and Freddy Fermin, but the Padres are still just 12th in OPS and 18th in home runs since then. We have to factor Petco Park into those numbers a bit, but the Padres will need their stars — Machado and Tatis — to step up. If they do, the bullpen can do the rest.
Seattle Mariners
Last World Series title: None (franchise debuted in 1977).
Last World Series appearance: None.
Closest call: Lost the 1995 ALCS to Cleveland and the 2000 ALCS to the Yankees, both in six games. Also lost the 2001 ALCS in five games. Were up 2-1 in the 1995 ALCS against Cleveland, but a powerful Mariners lineup got shut out twice in the final three games.
Three painful postseason moments:
-
Leading 1-0 and looking to tie the 2001 ALCS against the Yankees at two games apiece, New York’s Bernie Williams ties the game with an eighth-inning home run off Arthur Rhodes, and Alfonso Soriano hits a walk-off home run in the bottom of the ninth off Kazuhiro Sasaki.
-
Rhodes again. In Game 6 of the 2000 ALCS, the Mariners are leading the Yankees 4-3 in the seventh when David Justice blasts a three-run homer off Rhodes and sends Yankee Stadium into a deafening roar.
-
Back in the playoffs in 2022 for the first time since 2001, the Mariners lead the Astros 7-3 in the eighth inning in the division series. Alex Bregman hits a two-run homer in the eighth. With two on and two outs in the bottom of the ninth, manager Scott Servais summons starter Robbie Ray out of the bullpen to face Yordan Alvarez. Wrong decision. Alvarez blasts a game-winning three-run homer.
Why they haven’t won: Bad offenses and, for the longest time, bad drafting. And just missing the playoffs.
The Mariners couldn’t win in the mid-to-late ’90s despite a roster that featured Ken Griffey Jr., Randy Johnson, Alex Rodriguez and Edgar Martinez. Then came the miracle season of 2001, when they won a record 116 games with only Martinez still on the roster. Then came the long playoff drought, from 2002 to 2021. Those teams were marked mostly by inept offense: They once finished last in the AL in runs four straight seasons. In 2010, they traded for Cliff Lee and went all-in on pitching and defense. ESPN The Magazine put them on its cover. They lost 101 games.
Jerry Dipoto was hired as GM after the 2015 season and began turning things around. He drafted Logan Gilbert and George Kirby in the first round in 2018 and 2019, Cal Raleigh was a third-round pick in 2018, Bryan Woo was a sixth-round pick in 2021. The organization signed Julio Rodriguez in 2017. Since 2021, the Mariners have had five straight winning seasons and are seventh in the majors in wins — but this is only their second playoff appearance, having just missed in 2021, 2023 and 2024.
Why this could be the year: With Raleigh’s historic campaign leading the way, this is the best offense the Mariners have had in 25 years, with their highest wRC+ since 2001. Dipoto’s deadline trades for Josh Naylor and Eugenio Suarez created one of the best one-through-nine groups in the majors. They ranked third in the majors in home runs, and Rodriguez, Randy Arozarena and Naylor (!) each stole 30 bases. The Mariners’ bullpen isn’t super deep but the late-game foursome of Andres Munoz, Matt Brash, Eduard Bazardo and Gabe Speier has been reliable.
As that stretch of 17 wins in 18 games in September showed, the starting pitching might finally be living up to the preseason expectations following a stellar 2024 season. The concern is Woo’s health. Seattle’s best starter all season with 15 wins and a 2.97 ERA, Woo left his final start with inflammation in his pectoral muscle. The Mariners still have Gilbert, Kirby and Luis Castillo, but if the only franchise never to reach a World Series is to get there, a healthy Woo feels necessary.
Last World Series title: 1984
Last World Series appearance: 2012 (lost to the Giants in four games).
Closest call since then: Lost the 2013 ALCS to the Red Sox in six games.
Three painful postseason moments:
-
Leading 5-1 against the Red Sox in Game 2 of the 2013 ALCS and looking to go up two games to none in the series, David Ortiz ties the game in the eighth inning with a two-out, first-pitch grand slam off Joaquin Benoit, a play that sees Tigers right fielder Torii Hunter take a tumble over the wall and into the bullpen area at Fenway Park. The Red Sox walk it off the next inning with the help of an error and wild pitch.
-
Game 6 of the same series, the Tigers are leading 2-1 in the seventh inning of Game 6 when Jose Iglesias makes another critical error. Jose Veras enters to face Shane Victorino, who belts a grand slam.
-
Game 5 of last year’s ALDS against Cleveland, score tied 1-1 in the fifth, Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal serves up, yes, a grand slam to Lane Thomas.
Why they haven’t won: Couldn’t get it done with the Justin Verlander/Miguel Cabrera/Max Scherzer teams.
The Tigers had two long dry spells of ineptitude since that last championship in 1984. From 1994 to 2005, they suffered 12 consecutive losing seasons, including years with 106, 109 and 119 losses. From 2017 to 2023, it was seven straight losing seasons, including a 114-loss year in 2019.
Between those bad spells, however, were teams featuring the three future Hall of Famers. The Tigers made four straight postseasons from 2011 to 2014 but couldn’t get over the top. Dave Dombrowski’s teams were always top-heavy in stars but lacking in depth — and, usually, it was the bullpen that would bite the Tigers in the playoffs. Then Scherzer left as a free agent, Cabrera battled injuries and stopped hitting and Verlander was prematurely traded in 2017 with minimal return. The Tigers entered a rebuilding period that finally resulted in the franchise’s first playoff appearance in a decade in 2024.
Why this could be the year: The end of the regular season certainly doesn’t inspire much confidence after the Tigers went 7-17 in September and blew a 10-game lead to lose the division title. They just need to find their first-half mojo when they had the best record in the majors on July 6. It helps to have an ace like Skubal who can carry the rotation, and A.J. Hinch still has the same versatile roster he deployed so successfully for most of the season. Many believe Hinch is the best in-game manager in the business, and maybe that will be the difference-maker in a wide-open postseason.
Last World Series title: 1990
Last World Series appearance: 1990 (beat the A’s in four games).
Closest call since then: Lost the 1995 NLCS to the Braves in four games.
Three painful postseason moments:
-
In Game 1 of the 2012 NLDS against the Giants, Reds ace Johnny Cueto leaves his start after eight pitches with a back injury. The Reds lose the game and, minus Cueto the rest of the series, lose in five games.
-
In Game 5 of that series, the Reds are trailing 6-3 but rallying with two on and nobody out in the bottom of the sixth. But Ryan Hanigan strikes out looking on a 3-2 pitch and, with the runners moving, Jay Bruce is thrown out trying to steal third. Rally over. The Reds lose 6-4.
-
In Game 1 of the 1995 NLCS, Pete Schourek is trying to finish off a shutout, leading 1-0 heading into the top of the ninth against Atlanta. The Braves tie it up, however, and win in 11 innings. The Braves win Game 2 in extra innings as well and go on to a four-game sweep.
Why they haven’t won: Bad owners … and one very bad trade.
The Reds were competitive throughout the 1990s and won 96 games in 1999, the year Carl Lindner bought the team from Marge Schott, although they lost a tiebreaker game to the Mets and missed the playoffs. That offseason, GM Jim Bowden pulled off one of the biggest blockbusters in MLB history, acquiring Ken Griffey Jr. from the Mariners.
The trade turned out to be a disaster. Griffey had trouble staying healthy and wasn’t very productive while chewing up a large chunk of the payroll. The Reds had a losing season every year from 2001 to 2009. Bob Castellini purchased the team in 2005, and a new wave of young players led by Joey Votto, and with manager Dusty Baker at the helm, made the playoffs three times in four seasons, including two National League Central titles. The Reds’ payroll climbed as high as 11th in the majors in 2014 but that didn’t last long. By 2016, the Reds were back to 28th in payroll and losing 94 games.
The Reds rarely spend money in free agency. When they signed Mike Moustakas and Nick Castellanos for $64 million each in 2020, it was the first time they had ever signed a free agent for more than $50 million. By 2022, they were back to cutting payroll. Without an owner willing to go the extra mile, the Reds have found it difficult to make the playoffs — let alone win it all.
Why this could be the year: Hunter Greene, Nick Lodolo and Andrew Abbott. The Reds don’t score a lot of runs but they have a chance to prevent them. That young rotation trio is reminiscent of the 2003 Florida Marlins, a wild-card team that rode a young rotation to a World Series title, with Greene taking on the role of Josh Beckett, as the hard-throwing ace of the staff and ability to blow away an opponent in any given game. The Marlins also had a 20-year-old rookie named Miguel Cabrera who was batting cleanup by the World Series. The Reds have 21-year-old rookie in Sal Stewart, who has played just 18 games but has already spent some time batting cleanup.
And don’t overlook Terry Francona. He has been here before. He knows how to manage in the postseason, with the necessary urgency and the ability to get players to believe in themselves. He won’t be afraid, for example, to use rookie righty Chase Burns as a high-leverage option out of the bullpen, even though Burns has just 43 innings in the majors and even spent most of short time in the majors as a starter.
Last World Series title: 1993
Last World Series appearance: 1993 (beat the Phillies in six games).
Closest call since then: Lost the 2015 ALCS in six games to Kansas City. Also lost the 2016 ALCS, in five games, to Cleveland.
Three painful postseason moments:
-
Game 6 of the 2015 ALCS is tied in the eighth when Kansas City’s Lorenzo Cain draws a leadoff walk. Eric Hosmer then singles to right field with Cain heading to third, and when Jose Bautista throws the ball into second base, Cain keeps on sprinting home for the winning run in a 4-3 victory.
-
In Game 2 of that series, the Blue Jays lead 3-0 in the seventh but manager John Gibbons leaves in a tiring David Price to give up five hits and five runs.
-
The Blue Jays blow an 8-2 lead at home in Game 2 of the 2022 wild-card series against Seattle. The winning runs come up when J.P. Crawford clears the bases with a bloop double to center field as a diving George Springer collides with Bo Bichette.
Why they haven’t won: A tough division and the bats going dry in October.
After back-to-back World Series titles in ’92 and ’93, the Blue Jays went 20 years without a playoff appearance even though they were rarely bad in that period. They just couldn’t beat the Yankees and Red Sox or, later, the Rays and Orioles. They finally broke through and won the American League East in 2015 with the Josh Donaldson/Jose Bautista team that scored 127 more runs than any other AL team. They lost to the Royals in the ALCS that year and to Cleveland in 2016 — when the Jays scored just eight runs in five games. Remember when Cleveland had to start an obscure minor leaguer named Ryan Merritt, who had started one game in the majors, in Game 5 because they had no other starters? He tossed 4⅔ shutout innings.
In recent years, the Blue Jays went 0-6 in wild-card series in 2020, 2022 and 2023, scoring three runs in 2020, getting shut out once in 2022, and scoring one run in two games against the Twins in 2023. Entering 2025, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has hit .136 in six playoff games (no home runs, one RBI) and Bichette .273 with the same no home runs and one RBI.
Why this could be the year: This is a better Blue Jays club than those last three playoff teams. They have home-field advantage throughout the AL bracket and went 54-27 at home. Since May 27, only the Brewers have a better record, and they do things that work in postseason baseball: They play good defense and they had the lowest strikeout rate in the majors. Kevin Gausman and Shane Bieber give them a strong 1-2 punch and rookie Trey Yesavage could be a huge secret weapon, either as a starter or reliever, despite just 14 innings in the majors. Plus, Guerrero and Bichette (if he’s healthy) are due to finally do something in October.
Trending
-
Sports3 years ago
‘Storybook stuff’: Inside the night Bryce Harper sent the Phillies to the World Series
-
Sports1 year ago
Story injured on diving stop, exits Red Sox game
-
Sports2 years ago
Game 1 of WS least-watched in recorded history
-
Sports3 years ago
Button battles heat exhaustion in NASCAR debut
-
Sports3 years ago
MLB Rank 2023: Ranking baseball’s top 100 players
-
Sports4 years ago
Team Europe easily wins 4th straight Laver Cup
-
Environment2 years ago
Japan and South Korea have a lot at stake in a free and open South China Sea
-
Environment12 months ago
Here are the best electric bikes you can buy at every price level in October 2024