MLB
Final two Wild Card spots come down to last regular season game
Ten of the twelve playoff spots are filled as the Royals and Tigers clinch in the American League, but the National League will come down to the final game
The MLB playoff picture is as clear as mud, coming down to the final day of the regular season with everything still at stake for the last few Wild Card spots. It’s the kind of scenario that reminds you of the unpredictable nature of baseball, where the last out on the last day holds the weight of an entire season. Every at-bat feels heavier, every pitch more deliberate, and fans are left holding their breath between innings.
In the American League, the Detroit Tigers’ win over the hapless Chicago White Sox and the Baltimore Orioles’ victory over the Minnesota Twins on Friday night set things in motion. That combination of results knocked Minnesota out of the playoff race, leaving the final Wild Card slot in the Kansas City Royals’ hands, even though they took a beating from the Atlanta Braves. It’s the kind of backdoor playoff clinch that feels both like a relief and a caution - there’s no room for relaxation when you sneak into October by the skin of your teeth.
The Tigers, sitting on a 86-74 record, control their own fate, holding a slight edge for the second Wild Card spot. They’ve got two games left against the struggling White Sox, which seems like an easy path, but in baseball, easy can turn hard in a heartbeat. Meanwhile, Kansas City, with their 85-75 record, is in a dogfight against Atlanta. The Braves are still clawing for life in their own playoff race, and they aren’t about to take their foot off the gas.
Up at the top, the Yankees and Guardians are still playing their own game of leapfrog for home-field advantage throughout the AL playoffs. New York has the Pirates on their home turf, while Cleveland faces Houston in a series that feels more like a grind than a contest. Both teams dropped games on Friday, so the Yankees know a win on Saturday, coupled with a Guardians loss, would give them the edge they’ve been fighting for.
Over in the National League, the story is just as tangled. The Dodgers have taken command with a 96-64 record, needing just one more win in their weekend set with the Rockies to lock up home-field advantage throughout the NL playoffs. Behind them, the Phillies and Brewers have already settled into their roles as division champs, but the chaos reigns below them.
San Diego, at 92-68, holds the first Wild Card, while Atlanta and the Mets are tied at 87-71, sitting in the second and third Wild Card spots. Arizona, just a game behind at 88-72, is breathing down their necks. It’s the kind of situation that leaves teams scoreboard-watching between every pitch, knowing a misstep could be their last.
All three of those teams - Braves, Mets, and Diamondbacks - have matchups that should be in their favor. Atlanta hosts a Royals team that’s already locked in for the postseason, while the Mets face a Milwaukee squad that’s resting up for their October run. Arizona gets San Diego, a team that’s in but might be easing off the throttle. Still, no one is counting chickens just yet, especially not when a potential two-game Monday stretch looms for the Braves and Mets, depending on what shakes out over the weekend.
The World Series prediction? It’s tempting to call it a Yankees-Dodgers showdown - two franchises that practically define October baseball. But if the last few years have taught us anything, it’s that nothing is guaranteed in October. The Yankees have their rotation lined up with Carlos Rodon and Gerrit Cole ready to carry the load, while the Dodgers will lean on a lineup led by Ohtani and Betts to cover for a pitching staff that’s been shakier than they’d like.
But we are not yet prepared to call it for an American version of El Classico, the two behemoths that almost define the sport squaring off. The Phillies and Padres are both heating up, and no matter which way you cut it, the road to glory must go through Houston.
October’s beauty lies in its cruelty. The teams with the best records don’t always make it to the finish line, and upsets are just waiting for the right moment to crush dreams. Right now, all eyes are on that final regular season game, where every swing and miss could spell the end of one team’s season and the start of another’s unlikely run.