Bold predictions for 2025 MLB postseason, including for Yankees

The postseason is upon us, and while a Mets-Dodgers Wild Card series would have been a great way to kick it off, especially bookended against the Yankees-Red Sox matchup, this still figures to be a wild October.

That is, it feels like anybody could win it all after a season in which no team won 100 games, and the expected super-team Dodgers have to fight their way through a Wild Card series.

With that in mind, here are nine bold playoff predictions:


Brewers can't get it done

It’s a nice story, the small-market Brewers posting the best record in baseball this season, with 97 wins, but their history of failure in the postseason in recent years puts a lot of pressure on them going into October, and I think it will be more of the same.

They’re the ultimate grind-it-out team, putting the ball in play, out-hustling teams on a daily basis. But talent usually wins in the postseason, and the San Diego Padres, after defeating the Chicago Cubs in the Wild Card round, will simply out-talent them.

Garrett Crochet sets the tone

Crochet had a Cy Young-worthy season coming over to Boston, and he dominated the Yankees along the way, going 3-0 with a 3.29 ERA in four starts against them. The Yanks scored five runs in one of his starts but only five combined in the other three, including a seven-inning gem in the Bronx in August.

As such, I think he sets the tone for the Wild Card series by winning Game 1 at Yankee Stadium, outpitching Max Fried and dominating through seven innings.

Aaron Judge struggles, Yankees lose

Judge had his moments against the Red Sox this season, with five home runs and a 1.008 OPS in 13 games against them, but he also struck out 22 times in 56 plate appearances as Boston pitchers attacked him inside. And Crochet was especially tough on him, so I think the Yankees’ captain will have to wait a little longer for his breakout October.

And as well as the Yanks finished the season, it’s hard to forget how poorly they played against good teams for most of the season, or that the Red Sox were especially tough on them, winning nine of 13 games -- including five of seven in the Bronx.

New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) waits on deck during the third inning against the New York Mets at Citi Field.
New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) waits on deck during the third inning against the New York Mets at Citi Field. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images

It should be an entertaining series, likely going three games, but I think the Yankees’ bullpen will cost them at least one game, and it’s hard not to like Alex Cora over Aaron Boone in such a short series.

It’s Cal Raleigh’s year

It’s very close, but I’d give the MVP to Judge, who had another historic season, with a combination of high batting average and power that should be rewarded. Yet I think Raleigh will stamp this as his year with a big October, building on those 60 home runs he hit in the regular season.

Raleigh was clutch all season for the Mariners, slugging over .600 with an OPS over 1.000 hitting with runners in scoring position, with two outs and RISP, and high-leverage situations as well, as defined by Baseball Reference. So I’m saying he hits some big home runs that makes this a memorable October for him.

Dodger blues

The Los Angeles Dodgers were supposed to be unbeatable this season, after spending another gazillion dollars in the offseason, yet they won only 91 games, third-best among NL division winners, meaning they have to play a Wild Card series against the Cincinnati Reds.

As an aside, it’s a shame the Mets aren’t part of this. It would have made for great fun if they had done their part to earn the third Wild Card spot and give them a shot at knocking out the Dodgers in a rematch after last year’s NLCS.

I don’t give the Reds much of a chance, despite their strong starting pitching. The Dodgers should advance, setting up a big-stage NLDS against the Phillies. And while LA’s high-powered starting pitching is the healthiest it has been all season, it’s the bullpen -- their Achilles heel all season -- that will cost them a shot at repeating as champs.

The Dodgers’ pen had a 4.27 ERA this season, ranking 21st in the majors, with 26 blown saves. Tanner Scott, the most sought-after free agent reliever last winter, has been a bust, and there have been plenty of other culprits. As a result, LA may use starter Tyler Glasnow out of the 'pen, at least in the Wild Card series, as well as fellow starters Emmett Sheehan and Roki Sasaki, who was injured for most of the season.

Shohei Ohtani shines

It won’t be enough to save the Dodgers from a disappointing October, but Ohtani will stamp himself as the most remarkable player in baseball history, as he takes his two-way talents into the postseason.

To a large extent, Ohtani has already done that, hitting 55 home runs this season while returning to the mound from elbow surgery in the second half, pitching to a 2.87 ERA over 47 innings.

Aug 23, 2024; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) rounds the bases on a walk-off grand slam home run for his 40th of the season in the ninth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Dodger Stadium.
Aug 23, 2024; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) rounds the bases on a walk-off grand slam home run for his 40th of the season in the ninth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Dodger Stadium. / Jayne Kamin-Oncea - USA TODAY Sports

Now he’s expected to line up as the Dodgers’  No. 3 starter in the postseason, behind Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Blake Snell. He seems built for the biggest moments, famously striking out Mike Trout to win the World Baseball Classic for Japan in 2023, and he’s a good bet to make this a memorable October, at least on a personal level.

Jhoan Duran the difference-maker

Phillies GM Dave Dombrowski rather famously has a win-now mentality as a GM, more willing than most these days to give up top prospects in pursuit of a championship. And the case in point this year was his trade deadline deal to get Duran from the Minnesota Twins.

That deal, along with the late-season signing of David Robertson, were just what the Phillies needed for a bullpen that has cost them in postseasons past. The Mets likely could have had Duran if they’d been willing to trade better prospects than they gave up for Ryan Helsley and Tyler Rogers, and it’s fair to say that decision was a big part of why they fell short of the postseason.

Duran hasn’t been perfect for the Phillies, but he’s been mostly dominant, pitching to a 2.18 ERA with 16 saves in his two months since the trade. And I think he’ll be big reason the Phillies win what should be a heavyweight NLDS against the Dodgers.

Kyle Schwarber steps up

Schwarber had regular a spectacular season, hitting 56 home runs and totaling 132 RBI, and his knack for delivering in the clutch (1.252 OPS with two outs and RISP) fees like it could put the Phillies over the top in the NL and get them to the World Series.

It would be quite a feat, considering they lost ace Zack Wheeler to a season-ending shoulder injury, but the Phillies have the depth in the rotation to overcome it, and they have a team of October-tested veterans that should thrive in this postseason.

So I have them knocking off both the Dodgers and Padres to get to the World Series, with Schwarber leading the way and setting himself up for a huge payday as a free agent this winter. 

The Mariners? Yep, the Mariners

Why not? This might be the most wide-open postseason ever in baseball, with no super powers in sight, so in that sense it would be fitting for the Seattle Mariners to finally break through.

They’ve been underachievers for much of their existence, going all the way back to 2001, when they set the modern major league record by winning 116 games during the season, only to lose meekly to the Yankees in the ALCS in five games.

Since then they had only reached the postseason once before this season -- in 2022 -- and promptly got swept by the Houston Astros. But this year feels different. They went on a 17-1 roll in September to lock up the AL West title, sweeping the Astros in Houston last week to win the division.

With Raleigh leading the way, their offense is dangerous, and their strong starting pitching is mostly healthy after dealing with injuries during the season. But if Bryan Woo’s pectoral strain keeps him out of the rotation, that could hurt the Mariners’ chances.

All in all, it feels like anybody’s year. And nobody personifies anybody quite like the Mariners.

Tigers at Guardians Wild Card Game 1 prediction: Odds, expert picks, pitching matchup, betting trends, stats

The reward for the Cleveland Guardians (88-74) all-time great comeback to overtake the Detroit Tigers (87-75) and claim the American League's Central Division is...a Wild Card series against those same Tigers.

The Guardians closed the regular season winning 14 of their final 17 games while the Tigers lost 13 of their final 16 games.

Detroit will start probable Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal (13-6, 2.21 ERA). Cleveland has yet to announce who will take the ball in Game 1 but an educated guess points towards Gavin Williams (12-5, 3.06 ERA).

Lets dive into the series and specifically Game 1 and find a sweat or two.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch the first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Tigers at Guardians

  • Date: Tuesday, September 30, 2025
  • Time: 1:08PM EST
  • Site: Progressive Field
  • City: Cleveland, OH
  • Network/Streaming: ESPN

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Tigers at the Guardians

The latest odds as of Monday:

  • Moneyline: Detroit Tigers (-169), Cleveland Guardians (+138)
  • Spread:  Tigers -1.5
  • Total: 6.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Tigers at Guardians

  • Pitching matchup for September 30, 2025:
    • Tigers: Tarik Skubal (13-6, 2.21 ERA)
      Detroit has lost each of Skubal's last 3 starts allowing 8 runs over 15.1 innings with 19 strikeouts
    • Guardians: Gavin Williams (12-5, 3.06 ERA)
      Williams has won both of his last 2 starts allowing 2 earned runs over 11 innings with 21 strikeouts

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Tigers at Guardians

  • The Guardians have won 4 of their last 5 home games against AL Central teams
  • 4 of the Tigers' last 5 games against the Guardians have stayed under the Total
  • The Guardians have failed to cover the Run Line in their last 4 home games
  • Jose Ramirez closed the regular season hitting safely in 10 of 11 games (13-41)
  • Riley Greene was 6-39 (.154) over his last 10 games

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Expert picks & predictions for Tuesday’s game between the Tigers and the Guardians

Rotoworld Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Tuesday's game between the Tigers and the Guardians:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Cleveland Guardians at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 6.0.

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC.

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What are Red Sox options with Lucas Giolito sidelined vs. Yankees?

What are Red Sox options with Lucas Giolito sidelined vs. Yankees? originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Red Sox manager Alex Cora might have to get creative with the season on the line.

That’s the reality with veteran right-hander Lucas Giolito sidelined due to an elbow injury. Giolito was left off the team’s American League Wild Card roster before the best-of-three playoff series against the Yankees. Giolito was expected to start either Game 2 or Game 3, but that’s no longer the case.

Red Sox left-hander Garrett Crochet will start Game 1 against Yankees lefty Max Fried while right-hander Brayan Bello will get the ball in Game 2 opposite left-hander Carlos Rodón.

“We’ll go the first two games, then we’ll decide,” Cora said at Yankee Stadium on Monday before Game 1 on Tuesday night. “Obviously, we have some kids over there who have started lately. But first thing’s first: Crochet, Bello and if we have to make a decision for Game 3, we’ll go from there.”

Here are a few options if the Red Sox and Yankees split the first two games and hold a winner-take-all Game 3:

Connelly Early, LHP

A rookie making his playoff debut at Yankee Stadium? And doing so less than one month after being called up to the big leagues? It would be a nerve-wrecking situation for the Fenway Faithful. But Early feels like the best option for the Red Sox. He struck out 11 batters in his MLB debut and has displayed a pitch mix that helped him produce like Boston’s fourth-best starter after Crochet, Brayan Bello and Giolito. In four starts, the 23-year-old recorded a 2.33 ERA with 29 strikeouts to four walks in 19.1 innings.

Longtime Red Sox insider and current radio host Tony Massarotti believes Boston should give the ball to Early if a Game 3 presents itself. In fact, Massarotti said he would’ve preferred for Cora to go with Early even if Giolito was healthy.

“I like the idea of throwing a lefty in New York,” Massarotti said.

Crochet complimented Early ahead of the series.

“The pitchability is beyond his years, man,” Crochet said. “It’s really good plus stuff. Five pitches for strikes and the swing and miss component. I think he’ll be a huge bolster to the staff here in the postseason.”

Kyle Harrison, LHP

Harrison is another young left-hander, but has more experience despite also being called up to Boston earlier this month. Harrison, who was traded to the Red Sox in the Rafael Devers deal, recorded a 3.00 ERA in 12 innings in Boston. He struck out 13 batters with five walks in three games (two starts).

Harrison has made 37 starts in the big leagues, including 30 starts for the Giants the last two seasons. He hasn’t pitched in a postseason contest, though.

Bullpen game

Cora’s decision could come down to whether or not Early and/or Harrison were used in Games 1 and 2. If the Red Sox use either or both in relief, there’s a chance Cora will go with a bullpen arm in the starting spot. Heck, even if neither are used in relief Cora still could opt for such strategy.

That’s what Massarotti believes will happen.

“That’s my guess,” Massarotti said. “I hope it’s Early. I hope he goes with Connelly Early and then if he gets in trouble goes to the bullpen. Cora, in that situation, will trust himself. He’ll manage the game with relievers and get through it that way.”

Red Sox at Yankees Wild Card Game 1 prediction: Odds, expert picks, pitching matchup, betting trends, stats

One of the great rivalries in sports is renewed Tuesday night when the New York Yankees host the Boston Red Sox in Game 1 of their Best of 3 Wild Card series.

The Red Sox finished the regular season winning two of three in a weekend series against the Tigers to secure the second wild card spot with an overall record of 89-73. The Yankees closed strong winning eight straight to secure the top Wild Card spot.

Garrett Crochet (18-5, 2.59 ERA) gets the nod for Boston in Game 1. He will be opposed by Max Fried (19-5, 2.86 ERA). The Yankees' hurler faced Boston three times this season compiling a record of 1-1 allowing four earned runs over 18.1 innings with 22 strikeouts. In his first year in Beantown, Crochet was 3-0 with a 3.29 ERA and 39 strikeouts in four appearances against the Yankees.

Lets dive into Game 1 of this series and find a sweat or two.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch the first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Red Sox at Yankees

  • Date: Tuesday, September 30, 2025
  • Time: 6:08PM EST
  • Site: Yankee Stadium
  • City: Bronx, NY
  • Network/Streaming: ESPN

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Red Sox at the Yankees

The latest odds as of Monday:

  • Moneyline: Boston Red Sox (+112), New York Yankees (-136)
  • Spread:  Yankees -1.5 (+162)
  • Total: 7.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Red Sox at Yankees

  • Pitching matchup for September 30, 2025: Garrett Crochet vs. Max Fried
    • Red Sox: GarrettCrochet (18-5, 2.59 ERA)
      The left-hander has won his last 7 starts allowing 16 runs over 46 innings while striking out 59
    • Yankees: Max Fried (19-5, 2.86 ERA)
      The right-hander has won his last 6 starts allowing 8 earned runs over 46.1 innings while striking out 48

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Red Sox at Yankees

  • The Yankees have won 11 of their last 12 games overall and 9 of their last 11 at Yankee Stadium
  • 11 of the Yankees' last 13 games against AL East teams have gone under the Total
  • The Yankees have covered in 4 of their last 5 games for a profit of 2.67 units
  • Aaron Judge is hitting .500 over his last 5 games (9-18)
  • Trevor Story his .302 in September for the Sox

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Expert picks & predictions for Tuesday’s Game 1 between the Red Sox and the Yankees

Rotoworld Best Bet

Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.

Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Tuesday's Game 1 between the Red Sox and the Yankees:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the New York Yankees on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Boston Red Sox at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 7.0.

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper)
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
  • Trysta Krick (@Trysta_Krick)

Mets owner Steve Cohen apologizes to fans after team misses playoffs: 'The result was unacceptable'

Mets owner Steve Cohenapologized to the fans following Sunday's loss, which resulted in the team missing the playoffs after racing out to a 45-24 record.

"Mets fans everywhere. I owe you an apology," Cohen wrote on X (formerly Twitter). "You did your part by showing up and supporting the team. We didn’t do our part. We will do a post-mortem and figure out the obvious and less obvious reasons why the team didn’t perform up to your and my expectations.

"We are all feeling raw emotions today. I know how much time and effort you have put into this team. The result was unacceptable. Your emotions tell me how much you care and continues to motivate the organization to do better. Thank You to the best fans in sports."

The Mets entered the year with World Series expectations, but had one of the worst records in baseball from the middle of June through the end of the regular season.

That resulted in them falling out of playoff position, even though they had a chance in the final weekend to secure a spot in the postseason.

Had the Mets won Sunday's game against the Marlins in Miami, they would've punched their ticket to the Wild Card Series, where the Dodgers were waiting.

Instead, the Mets lost, 4-0, bringing their campaign to a close.

As the Mets look to reshape their roster ahead of the 2026 season, there are lots of burning questions.

Among them: the futures of Pete Alonsoand Edwin Diaz, how to fix the starting rotation, and whether the offensive core will be shaken up. 

Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns will hold his end-of-season news conference on Monday at 3:30 p.m. It will air live across SNY's social media platforms. 

Playoff Window Slams Shut on Mets as Hectic 2025 Season Ends

After a wild set of Games 162 on Sunday across North America, the New York Mets are out of Major League Baseball’s playoffs, and the Cincinnati Reds are in. This season, the Reds won four of their six games in head-to-head competition to send the Mets packing despite having identical 83-79 records.

“It’s just straight-up disappointing,” Mets slugging first baseman Pete Alonso said in the clubhouse after a 4-0 loss to the Marlins at Miami.

Like the Mets, the Reds lost Sunday, 4-2, at Milwaukee. Even so, the Reds earned the prize of facing the defending World Series Los Angeles Dodgers in a three-game NL Wild Card Series starting Tuesday night at Dodger Stadium.

The Polar Bear also told reporters he would opt out of the second year of his contract worth $24 million and take another shot at free agency after hitting 38 homers and leading the team with 126 RBIs.

The tie-breaking format giveth and taketh away. Last year, the Mets benefited from it, qualifying on the final day of the season when they and the Atlanta Braves had the better head-to-head records against the Arizona Diamondbacks, who were eliminated.

“I’m still smarting from that,” D-backs manager Torey Lovullo said at Petco Park where the D-backs were swamped by the playoff-bound San Diego Padres, 12-4. This year, Arizona was eliminated with two games to go.

In the American League, the New York Yankees will renew their long rivalry against the Boston Red Sox in a best-of-three Wild Card Series beginning Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium. They finished atop the East with an AL-best 94-68 record, tied with the Toronto Blue Jays, who won the division by virtue of bettering the Yankees in the season series, 8-5.

If the Yankees defeat Boston, the Blue Jays will be awaiting in an AL Division Series beginning Saturday in Toronto.

“The AL East is maybe the best division in baseball,” Yanks starter Luis Gil told writers in the home clubhouse at Yankee Stadium after defeating the Baltimore Orioles, 3-2.

The Jays beat the Rays, 13-4, at Toronto to win the division title.

The Cleveland Guardians completed their comeback from 15.5 games behind the Detroit Tigers on July 8, winning the AL Central by a game when they defeated Texas, 9-8, at Progressive Field on Sunday and Detroit lost at Boston, 4-3. The Tigers and Guardians will continue their battle in the other AL Wild Card Series, beginning Tuesday in Cleveland.

Out west, Cal Raleigh didn’t hit a home run this weekend, but finished his breakout season with 60, setting the record for a catcher and for a switch-hitter, and coming two shy of Aaron Judge’s AL-record of 62 set three years ago. The AL West-winning Mariners were swept by the Dodgers.

Judge finished atop MLB in batting average (.331), OPS (1.144), OPS+ (212) and WAR (9.7), among other categories. Raleigh and Judge are the two favorites to win AL MVP, and the debate continues to rage. The vote of two writers in every AL city is due by game-time Tuesday.

Clayton Kershaw finished his 18-year MLB regular-season career Sunday with 5 1/3 innings of four-hit, no-run ball, including one walk and seven strikeouts. He came back in May after multiple offseason surgeries to record an 11-2 record and a 3.36 ERA. 

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Sunday was a fitting close of another chapter in Kershaw’s career. He totaled 222 wins, a .698 winning percentage, a 2.54 ERA and 3,045 strikeouts during his years in MLB. His message to Dodger teammates was utilize every opportunity, like the chance to repeat as World Series winners for the first time since the Yanks won three in a row from 1998-2000.

“[Kershaw said] take advantage of [every opportunity],” Roberts said. “And I think those guys really bonded when Clayton mentioned how special this team was.”

The remaining NL series offers the Padres vs. the Chicago Cubs in Wrigley Field. It may be ancient history, but the last time these two teams met in the postseason was 1984 when the Padres overcame two opening losses at Wrigley to win the last of the best-of-five NL Championship Series in San Diego.

As dramatic as Cleveland’s comeback was, so was the Mets’ collapse. They had the best record in baseball of 45-24 on June 12 and went 38-55 the rest of the way. This happened despite the team having the second-highest payroll in baseball of $340.6 million and signing Juan Soto to a 13-year, $765 million contract this past winter.

Comparatively, the NL Central-winning Milwaukee Brewers and their Central foe Reds both made it with payrolls of $142.2 million and $140.9 million. Milwaukee had the best record in baseball at 97-65.

For that matter, the Tigers and Guardians in the AL Central spent $170.1 million and $121.4 million respectively.

The Mets, in the nation’s largest market, won the offseason but choked during the regular season.

“This was a team that was not only built to play in October, but to play deep in October,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza told the media on Sunday. “Call it sad, frustrating. I mean, you name it.”

Mendoza now finds himself on the bubble along with Arizona manager Lovullo and Bob Melvin of the San Francisco Giants, whose clubs were eliminated despite high payrolls and even higher expectations. Even though Lovullo is under contract, he said on Sunday he hasn’t been told by Arizona management if he’ll be back in 2026. Mendoza knows the score. 

“All year I’d been saying, ‘We have the talent, we have the talent,’ but we’re going home,” Mendoza said. “I take responsibility. I’m the manager. It starts with me. I’ve got to take a long look here. How I need to get better. That was the message to the whole team as well.” 

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Cora reveals Lucas Giolito won't pitch in Red Sox-Yankees playoff series

Cora reveals Lucas Giolito won't pitch in Red Sox-Yankees playoff series originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Red Sox starter Lucas Giolito will not pitch against the Yankees in the American League Wild Card series, according to manager Alex Cora.

Giolito is dealing with an elbow injury.

“He’s not going to be on the roster,” Cora said at Yankee Stadium on Monday with Game 1 slated for Tuesday night. “He’s been battling with his elbow the last few days.”

Giolito on Monday went to see Dr. Jeff Dugas, an orthopedic surgeon who specializes in shoulder, elbow, and knee injuries in athletes. Cora did not have any details pertaining to the visit. Dugas is the same doctor who performed the internal bracing procedure on Giolito that sidelined him for the 2024 season.

“Hopefully it’s nothing major, but he won’t be ready for this one,” Cora said.

Giolito was expected to start Game 3 in New York if the series reached three games.

The best-of-three playoff series will feature Red Sox left-hander Garrett Crochet on the mound opposite Yankees left-handed Max Fried in Game 1. Right-hander Bryan Bello is now cemented into the second spot and will face New York left-hander Carlos Rodon in Game 2.

If the series extends to Game 3, the Red Sox could give the ball to a rookie starter like Connelly Early or Kyle Harrison. Yankees right-hander Cam Schlittler is expected to take the mound in Game 3, if the two teams split the first two games.

Giolito’s most recent appearance came against the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday. The 31-year-old allowed one run on three hits in 4.2 inning while striking out three batters.

Giolito played a key role in Boston’s second-half surge. He recorded a 3.41 ERA across 26 starts (145 innings) and provided the Red Sox with a reliable starter behind Crochet.

Mets All-Star first baseman Pete Alonso will opt out of contract and test free agency again

MIAMI — Pete Alonso will opt out of his contract with the New York Mets and enter free agency again this fall, the All-Star first baseman said after the team missed the playoffs.

Alonso tested the open market last offseason before ultimately staying with the franchise that drafted him in 2016 out of Florida. He signed a two-year, $54 million contract in February that paid him $30 million this season with a $24 million player option for next year.

Alonso indicated he’d like to return to the Mets again, but added he wants to win a championship.

“There’s some great guys in this clubhouse, there’s some great people on the staff,” he said. “And every single day, it’s just been a pleasure coming to work and putting on the orange and blue. I’ve really appreciated and been nothing but full of gratitude every single day. Nothing’s guaranteed, but we’ll see what happens.

“I’ve loved being a Met, so hopefully they’ve appreciated me in the same (way).”

The 30-year-old Alonso earned his fifth All-Star selection this season. He batted a career-best .272 with 38 homers, 126 RBIs and a career-high 41 doubles — tied for most in the National League.

Along the way, he broke the Mets’ franchise record for home runs, surpassing Darryl Strawberry’s previous mark of 252.

“I think the biggest thing is, I want to win,” Alonso said. “I know we didn’t this year, but we had the right pieces I think, we just didn’t do it. At the beginning of the year, you just want to have the best possible chance to hold up the trophy at the end and see yourself being a champion. So for me, it’s why I do this. I want to be on top of the mountain. I want to win a World Series. That’s the ultimate goal.”

The Mets entered the regular-season finale needing a win at Miami and a Cincinnati loss in Milwaukee to make the playoffs.

The Reds lost 4-2 to the NL Central champion Brewers, but New York was eliminated with a 4-0 loss to the Marlins.

Alonso has 264 homers and 712 RBIs in 1,008 games over his seven-year career — all with the Mets. He has played in a team-record 416 consecutive games, the second-longest streak in the majors behind Atlanta first baseman Matt Olson (783).

“I love Pete,” longtime teammate Brandon Nimmo said. “Obviously, we got to see Pete at his absolute best this year, just absolutely destroying baseballs. ... I’m sure the Mets will be in contact with him this offseason a lot. But if it did happen to be my last (game with him), I’ve enjoyed every second of it.”

Yankees vs. Red Sox 2025 AL Wild Card Series Preview and Prediction

The Yankees finished the regular season tied for the best record in the American League. But they didn’t hold the tiebreaker that decided the AL East title, so their initial October reward is…

A best-of-three Wild Card Series against a team that clobbered them for much of the season. Oh, and it’s their bitter rivals, the Boston Red Sox, the same franchise that authored the stunning 2004 ALCS comeback against the Yanks and has beaten them in the two playoff meetings since then, too.

For baseball fans, it’s a spicy matchup, thick with subplots and charged history. For the Yankees? Potentially dangerous. And not just because of whatever lingering karma there might be from those previous playoff losses.

Boston was 9-4 against the Yankees this season, outscoring them, 66-51. In fairness, the Yankees won the last series between the teams, at Fenway Park in mid-September. But Boston’s top two starters, Garrett Crochet and Brayan Bello, were a combined 5-1 against the Yanks and figure to start the first two games. So a series full of potential pinstriped pitfalls begins with two rugged assignments.

Should be a fun few days that adds lore to a cherished baseball rivalry. Your pulse racing yet? 

WHAT THE YANKEES HAVE GOING FOR THEM

Let’s address the 6-7, 282-pound slugger in the room first: At some point, Aaron Judge will put up October numbers more like his regular season rampages, right? If it starts in this series, against this team, an already-all-time Yankee will only add to his mighty rep. 

Judge, who finished on a heater, had yet another historic regular season, winning his first batting title and smashing 53 home runs. He’s only the third player ever to have a 50-homer season while leading his league in hitting, joining Jimmie Foxx and Mickey Mantle, and only the fifth since 1961 to lead MLB in average, on-base percentage, and slugging in a single season. The others are George Brett, Larry Walker, Barry Bonds, and Miguel Cabrera.

Crazy, right? Of course, now is when more attention will be paid to Judge’s postseason numbers – a .205 average with a .768 OPS, well off his career marks. He has 16 homers in 58 games (a 44-homer pace over 162 games), but Yankee fans want more.

Judge was the main cog in the best offense in baseball this season, one that re-tooled after Juan Soto departed, and Yankee slugging overcame pockmarks in other departments. They led MLB in runs, hit the second-most homers in team history (274), and even ranked eighth in stolen bases. Stealth Bombers?

They can send hitters in waves at opponents, including Giancarlo Stanton, who thrives in October. Jazz Chisholm Jr. had a 30-30 season. Cody Bellinger soared in the Bronx. Ben Rice emerged as an exit-velocity king. Only Judge hit more homers than slugging surprise Trent Grisham (34).

The Yanks also have their own formidable 1-2 rotation punch in Max Fried (MLB-best 19 wins and a 2.86 ERA) and Carlos Rodón, who allowed just 6.1 hits-per-nine innings, tops in the AL. Impressive rookie Cam Schlittler, who barely looks like he’s throwing hard, even as he hits 99 miles-per-hour on the radar gun, figures as their third starter. Schlittler had a 2.96 ERA in 14 starts. Overall, the Yanks were fourth in MLB in starter ERA (3.61).

WHAT THE RED SOX HAVE GOING FOR THEM

Crochet, a dazzling lefty, is at least in the conversation about the best pitcher in baseball after he went 18-5 with a 2.59 ERA, led the AL in innings (205.1) and all of MLB in strikeouts (255). The vaunted Yankee offense batted .200 against him with a .601 OPS, and he had 39 strikeouts and only four walks in 27.1 innings against them. Bello was 2-1 with a 1.89 ERA against the Yankees.

That starter combo could be deadly in such a short series, especially when it’s backed by an elite bullpen. The Red Sox had the second-lowest relief ERA in baseball (3.61), led by former Yankee closer Aroldis Chapman. Chapman had an absurd season, notching a 1.17 ERA, holding hitters to a .132 average and striking out 85 in 61.1 innings.

No Roman Anthony hurts the offense, but the Sox still scored the seventh-most runs, even without any spectacular individual seasons. With the Yanks starting lefties in the first two games, platoon guys such as Romy Gonzalez (.978 OPS, seven homers against lefties) and Rob Refsnyder (.959, seven homers) might be factors.

Should mojo count here? The Sox were 5-2 at Yankee Stadium. The Yanks looked bad against them in several of those nine Boston wins. Whatever psychological advantages the Yanks once seemed to hold over the Sox back in the lopsided days of yore when the rivalry was more like a “rivalry” are long gone. Whatever you believe about that sort of thing. 

THE YANKEES WILL WIN THE SERIES IF…

Judge slugs. It’s not all on him, but it kinda is, you know? He’s due. It won’t be easy, though. He’s got two career homers off Crochet, but he’s 3-for-15 lifetime against the lefty with 11 strikeouts. 

The Yankees were good at scoring early, slugging an MLB-record 50 homers in the first inning, and that could be huge in this series. They tallied in the opening frame 65 times during the regular season and were 46-19 (.708) in those games. If they continue to hit home runs in this series, regardless of inning, they will be difficult to beat.

Parts of the Yankee summer were marred by sloppy play, but they cleaned up some of that during their MLB-best 34-14 run to close the season. Bad fundies are part of the bad aftertaste from last year’s World Series thud, so avoiding erratic defense now is paramount. 

Finally, the Yanks have the worst bullpen ERA of any playoff team (4.37, ranked 23rd in MLB). David Bednar has been the best of the relievers added during the deadline makeover, but the bullpen looms as a potential trouble spot.

New York Yankees relief pitcher David Bednar (53) reacts after defeating the Houston Astros 5-4 at Yankee Stadium
New York Yankees relief pitcher David Bednar (53) reacts after defeating the Houston Astros 5-4 at Yankee Stadium / Wendell Cruz - Imagn Images

THE RED SOX WILL WIN THE SERIES IF…

They get a couple of starting pitching outings that allow them to go starter to setup man (Garrett Whitlock) to Chapman. Whitlock, whom the Sox plucked from the, ahem, Yankees in the 2020 Rule 5 Draft, has been terrific (2.25 ERA).

Defense has been a red (Sox) flag all season. Boston had the most errors in MLB. Does that impact the series?

And how does Alex Bregman, a former member of another October Yankee nemesis – the Astros – factor in? He was on three Houston clubs that eliminated the Yanks and had a .924 OPS against them this year, his first season in Boston. Tuesday will be his 100th career postseason game. Seems unlikely he’s not deeply involved in this.

PREDICTION

Yanks in three.

Sure, Boston dominated the season series. Was that timing or something deeper? We’re banking on timing and that Judge has a big series, Stanton has his usual fall power surge, Yankee starters thrive and the club limits its mistakes.

Easy, right? We kid.

Nothing is easy when it comes to Yankees-Sox.

Main culprit of 2025 Mets' collapse was starting rotation — and it wasn't hard to see coming

In the wake of the Mets' season ending with them falling all the way out of the playoffs, there will be no shortage of takes about what went wrong with a team that entered the year as an expected World Series contender. 

There will be discussions about the inconsistent offense, the subpar defense, the coaching, the trade deadline, the decisions made by manager Carlos Mendoza, and the team's failure to win a single game they trailed after eight innings.

And while it's understandable to want to point fingers in a whole bunch of different directions, it can be argued that doing so is kind of a waste.

Yes, there seemed to be a spark missing at times.

Sure, the offense could've been more consistent.

And yes, there were injuries that threw a wrench into things.

But as the dust settles on the 2025 Mets and the 2026 team starts to take shape, it's pretty easy to determine the main culprit for what went wrong.

It was the starting rotation. 

The rotation is the nerve center of a team. Everything flows from there. If there isn't enough length provided (the Mets finished 27th in MLB in innings pitched per start) it negatively impacts the bullpen, which becomes overworked. 

If the starting pitching is constantly putting the team in holes, there's that much more pressure on the offense to dig out of it.

It's a vicious cycle.

/ Sep 21, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets pitcher Sean Manaea (21) reacts as he exits the game against the Washington Nationals during the fourth inning at Citi Field.

Take Game 162 for an example.

The Mets had simply run out of starting pitchers to rely on. That led them to start a struggling Sean Manaea, who was pulled after 1.2 innings. From there, it was a march of relievers -- Huascar Brazoban for 1.0 inning, Brooks Raley for 0.2 of an inning, Ryne Stanek for 0.1 of an inning, and Tyler Rogers for 0.1 of an inning.

By the time Edwin Diaz was called on to stop the bleeding in the fifth inning, the Mets were in a 4-0 hole. And the season, for all intents and purposes, was over.

You can question Mendoza's decision to pull Raley as quickly as he did, or to go to Stanek. But the fact of the matter is that he was managing the last three and a half months of the season with one hand tied behind his back. That's because the starting pitching was simply not good enough in any aspect, and it took the rest of the team down with it.

So this was a collapse, sure. But it's one with an asterisk, because it can be easily argued that the 2025 Mets were irretrievably flawed from the start.

Looking at how things were shaping up back on Feb. 18, following Frankie Montas' injury (and the questionable decision to sign him in the first place), the Mets' rotation still had a high ceiling. But the floor was alarmingly low.

As I laid out at the time, there were injury concerns with Kodai Senga, Clay Holmes was transitioning from reliever to starter, Sean Manaea's late-season results in 2024 were perhaps unsustainable, and David Peterson had yet to put together back-to-back strong seasons.

Meanwhile, Griffin Canning, Tylor Megill, and Paul Blackburn were fine as depth options, but counting on two out of three of them in the rotation could be asking a lot. Regarding Brandon Sproat, his initial struggle with the transition to Triple-A meant that it could possibly take longer than expected for him to become a big league option.

To put it simply, there were lots of what-ifs -- too many for a team with championship aspirations. And while the starting staff excelled over the first few months of the season, the cracks were easy to see.

That included regression from Canning, who had a 5.90 ERA from May 23 to June 26, when he tore his Achilles. And it included the struggles of Megill, who had a 5.79 ERA from May 4 through June 14, which was his last appearance of the season as he dealt with injuries.

Jun 14, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets starting pitcher Tylor Megill (38) reacts during the fourth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Citi Field.
Jun 14, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets starting pitcher Tylor Megill (38) reacts during the fourth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Citi Field. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images

When the injuries hit Canning, Megill, and then Senga, the Mets -- who were also without Manaea -- were left in a precarious spot.

It would've seriously impacted any team, but the way New York chose to address it was puzzling.

They in effect punted a handful of games as they relied on bullpen games, four starts from Paul Blackburn (losses on June 13, 18, 23, and 28), and one start from Blade Tidwell.

The bullpen game strategy cost the Mets two games in July, and came at a time when Nolan McLean was dominating for Triple-A Syracuse.

Against the backdrop of David Stearns choosing to not promote McLean, the Mets kept losing games that were winnable.

It's impossible to know how McLean would've fared if he was called up a month or so before his debut on Aug. 16. But it's hard to believe his presence in the rotation wouldn't have led to at least one more win, which would've resulted in the Mets making the playoffs.

You can also point to not adding a starting pitcher around the trade deadline, but the scarcity of available arms and the high price tags make that one a lot more understandable than the strategy they employed over the summer as the injuries mounted -- when it at times felt like New York thought a giveaway loss here or there wouldn't matter.

Still, it all comes back to the way the starting rotation was put together during the offseason. There was just not enough certainty, and it put the team in a precarious spot really quickly -- one Stearns and Co. were unable to wrest themselves out of.

Given Stearns' history of success and analytical nature, it's fair to believe he'll take a different approach to the rotation for 2026 -- one that places an emphasis on track record over hope.

Giants come to grips with another end-of-season firing after Bob Melvin ousted

Giants come to grips with another end-of-season firing after Bob Melvin ousted originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — The timing was odd, and looking back, it makes even less sense. 

At 1:05 p.m. on July 1, the Giants sent out a press release announcing that they had picked up the 2026 option on manager Bob Melvin. The lead quote in the release was from president of baseball operations Buster Posey, who said later that day he had spent months watching Melvin closely and weeks having internal discussions about whether to make the move. 

“We believe he’s the right person to continue guiding this team forward,” Posey said that day, even though the Giants had lost six of seven. 

Three months later, the Giants sent out another press release. Melvin had been fired, with Posey saying this time that a change of leadership was needed.

It is an unfortunate end for Melvin, a Bay Area native who viewed this as his dream job and ideally his final MLB job. But, more than anything, it’s a bad look for everyone involved.

At the end of the 2023 season, Gabe Kapler was fired. A year later, it was Farhan Zaidi, with Posey taking over. This time, it’s Melvin. There were plenty of reasons why each move was made, but still, this is a stunning stretch for an organization that wraps itself in “Forever Giant” talk and had incredible continuity while winning three titles. 

“It’s not ideal, right?” Posey said Monday. “It’s definitely not ideal. But unfortunately, we talked about it a lot, what the standards are for the Giants, and we have high standards and I hold myself to those same standards. I understand fully the position that I’m in now.”

The front office is not blameless, and Posey knows it. He hoped to boost morale by picking up Melvin’s option, but it became an expensive mistake. He made decisive moves in acquiring Rafael Devers and selling at the deadline, but the Giants also ran out of pitching, and looking back at the offseason, it’s clear they put too much faith in internal options at several positions. They certainly need to be more active with the roster this winter and build more depth. 

This is also a tough day for many in the clubhouse. Ultimately, they’re the ones taking the field, and for a second time in three years, they have watched a manager get fired. Melvin was popular to the end, and it was a somber scene on Sunday afternoon as some players realized he would take the fall for their inconsistency on the field. 

This all comes after more than a decade of stability under Brian Sabean and Bruce Bochy, but now, the Giants have a streak of three straight years in which they either fired their manager or president of baseball operations. 

Posey must know that there’s more work to be done behind the scenes. He has spent 12 months watching what goes on at every level of the organization, and he knows this wasn’t just about the manager. Something at Oracle Park just isn’t clicking. 

“Without a doubt, you hope there can be consistency in these leadership positions,” he said Monday. “We’ve got to get back to a place where we’re getting in the playoffs, we’re making runs in the playoffs. That’s what our fan base deserves. That’s what the city deserves. 

“When seasons don’t go the way you want them, it’s never one person’s fault. It’s never one group’s fault. But when they don’t go the way you want them, you can’t — in my opinion — sit there and say we’re going to come back and do the same thing that we did this year for the next year. Having said that, that’s part of why we landed where we landed.”

Zaidi hired Melvin in part because he was the opposite of Kapler, who had become unpopular by the end despite leading the Giants to 107 wins in 2021. Melvin is old school, and he brought along longtime coaches like Matt Williams and Ryan Christenson, who could not have been more different than the ones that were let go. 

The Giants made a show of cutting back their analytics department, ignoring the fact that the rest of the good teams in their division, the Los Angeles Dodgers in particular, continue to expand. Multiple players said this season that it is one area where the team is lacking. 

In retrospect, it’s clear there was a middle ground — and Stephen Vogt represented that. But the Giants played it safe, and they’re now paying for it. As they fell out of the race this year, Vogt — with a staff filled with former Kapler disciples — led a historic comeback in Cleveland. 

Vogt once backed up Posey, who now will lead the search for his own hand-picked manager. It is a decision that most lead executives only get to make once, and Posey must get it right. 

He is all-in with the core of this roster, and his choice must be strong enough to lead the Giants to the postseason in 2026. The next manager must also be someone who can grow with Posey and general manager Zack Minasian. The Giants don’t want to do this all again in two years. They have already done it far more often than expected. 

The tradition at Oracle Park last decade was holding postseason games in October. This decade, they have held press conferences to explain a firing, and no matter what one might feel about the individual decisions, there’s no denying that, taken all together, it’s a bad look.

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ICYMI in Mets Land: All the fallout from season-ending loss, and what's to come

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Sunday, in case you missed it...


Giants fire manager Bob Melvin after two disappointing seasons with team

Giants fire manager Bob Melvin after two disappointing seasons with team originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Once known for their stability on the top step of the dugout, the Giants now will embark on a search for a new manager for the second time in 25 months. 

Manager Bob Melvin was let go on Monday morning, ending his run with his hometown organization after two mediocre seasons. The decision came about three months after president of baseball operations Buster Posey picked up Melvin’s option for the 2026 MLB season, a move that was popular in the clubhouse but did nothing to jolt a slumping team.

“After careful evaluation, we determined that making a change in leadership was in the best interest of the team,” Posey said in a statement. “The last couple of months have been both disappointing and frustrating for all of us, and we did not perform up to our standards. We now turn our focus to identifying a new leader to guide us forward.”

After Posey’s decision in July, the Giants went into yet another second-half collapse. They lost six straight ahead of the MLB trade deadline, pushing Posey to sell. At one point, the Giants lost 15 of 16 games at Oracle Park, a historically-bad run that cut into the attendance and enthusiasm gains they had seen in the first half. 

That stretch brought up new questions about Melvin’s job security, but the Giants briefly righted the ship in late August and early September, only to once again fall apart after moving into a tie for the final postseason spot. They were eliminated on Tuesday night and finished 81-81 after going 80-82 in Melvin’s first season.

For the 63-year-old, this could be the end of the road. A Palo Alto native who played for the Giants in the 1980s, Melvin viewed this as a dream job. He had hoped this would be his final big league stop, although that might change given the way it ended. Melvin previously managed in Seattle, Oakland, Arizona and San Diego.

The Giants brought Melvin up the coast after firing Gabe Kapler at the end of the 2023 season. In just about every way, Melvin stood as the opposite of Kapler, and his hire generally was met with solid reviews. 

In two years, he has had the backing of his players, particularly Matt Chapman, who played for Melvin in Oakland and has said he is a major reason why he signed a long-term deal with the Giants. Players who spoke about Melvin this past week said they hoped to see him back in 2026, noting he wasn’t the reason the season fell apart. Posey himself said the same three months ago. 

On July 1, after losing six of seven, Posey picked up Melvin’s option for next season. He said that day that he had spent months watching the manager and did not make the decision hastily. Posey said the team’s failures were on his shoulders, as well as a talented roster that was underperforming. 

“From my perspective, and also my perspective as a player, sometimes when you’re going through a rough patch there’s a tendency to want to point the finger at coaches, and ultimately I believe we have great players, and I still believe in that group of players, but it boils down to them needing to play better baseball,” Posey said back then. “If anybody deserves any blame from the top it should be on me, it shouldn’t be on the manager or coaching staff. I’m the one who sets the roster. I felt like, with all those things considered, this was a good time for me to show my belief in Bob and this coaching staff.”

Chapman and Logan Webb were among the players who said that day that they agreed with the decision, but the Giants continued their freefall. They were 11 games over .500 when Posey traded for Rafael Devers and five over when he said Melvin would be back in 2026, but ended up missing the playoffs for the eighth time in nine years.

Heading into his second offseason in charge of baseball operations, Posey now will lead a managerial search, and he has to get it right. The Giants have a roster of highly-compensated players in their prime, and everyone involved is sick of finishing around .500. 

There are sure to be Bruce Bochy rumors, although that seems an unlikely path for many reasons, most notably the fact that Bochy currently is managing elsewhere and might be headed back to retirement. This is a chance for Posey to pick a long-term leader for the clubhouse and partner for the front office. It might be the most important decision he makes as president of baseball operations, but it’s also one he never imagined having to think about in October 2025. 

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Blue Jays cap turnaround from worst to first by holding off Yankees to win seventh AL East crown

TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays capped a turnaround from worst to first by holding off the New York Yankees to win the AL East on the final day of the season, their first division title in a decade and the seventh in team history.

“The job is not finished,” slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr. said after a 13-4 win over the Tampa Bay Rays that clinched the division crown and secured a bye into the Division Series. “We’ve got to continue to play hard and play good baseball.”

The Blue Jays finished 74-88 a season ago, last in the AL East and 20 games behind the first-place Yankees.

“I think everybody believed that last year was not who we were as a team,” outfielder George Springer said. “From day one of spring training you could kind of feel the vibe.”

This year, a four-game sweep over New York from June 30 to July 3 was part of a season-best 10-game winning streak that vaulted Toronto into the division lead for good.

“Once we kind of hit our stride, we didn’t think anyone could beat us,” manager John Schneider said. “This is, in my opinion, the toughest division in the game. I don’t think anyone, besides the people that are here soaking wet like me, expected us to be in this position.”

Toronto lost six of seven down the stretch, falling into a first-place tie with New York, but held onto the top spot in the American League by winning its final four games.

“We almost broke at the end but, from that point on, we didn’t break in the division,” Schneider said. “That was obviously a huge four games for us.”

The Blue Jays won eight of 13 meetings with the Yankees this season, giving them the tiebreaker after both teams finished 94-68.

Springer hit one of four Blue Jays home runs in Sunday’s rout, his latest drive in a productive season that seemed unlikely in 2024, when the 2017 World Series MVP struggled through one of the worst years of his career, hitting just .220.

“I can’t say enough about him,” Schneider said of Springer. “Fitting that his last at-bat was a home run. He’s the heart and soul of our team. He’s infectious when he plays and he’s infectious in the clubhouse.”

Toronto will face the winner of the best-of-three Wild Card Series between the Red Sox and Yankees in the ALDS, giving the Blue Jays a valuable opportunity to rest and recover while its foes battle in the Bronx this week.

Game 1 will be Saturday in Toronto, and the Blue Jays have home-field advantage throughout the AL playoffs after finishing with the top record in the American League.

Arguably no one needs the break more than shortstop Bo Bichette. The two-time AL hits leader and two-time All-Star hasn’t played since Sept. 6, when he injured his left knee in a collision with Yankees catcher Austin Wells.

“It’s kind of exactly what we needed,” Schneider said of the five-day break before the Division Series. “I hope that (Bichette) gets a chance to contribute to this. He’s been instrumental to what we’ve been doing here the last six years.”

Bichette has been hitting off a tee and throwing but has yet to resume running.

“Every day I’m feeling better,” Bichette said. “I’ll be doing everything that I possibly can to get back.”

Toronto hasn’t won a postseason game since losing the American League Championship Series to Cleveland in 2016. The Blue Jays won wild-card berths in 2020, 2022 and 2023 but were swept by Tampa Bay, Seattle and Minnesota, respectively.

Kershaw works 5 1/3 scoreless innings in final regular-season start as Dodgers top Mariners 6-1

SEATTLE — Clayton Kershaw tossed 5 1/3 scoreless innings in the final regular-season start of his 18-year major league career and helped the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Seattle Mariners 6-1 on Sunday.

Kershaw (11-2) scattered four hits, three of them singles, and struck out seven, including the last batter he faced — the Mariners’ Eugenio Suárez. The 37-year-old left-hander turned to his slider in the top of the sixth to retire Suárez for the 3,052nd strikeout of his career. He then left the game to a standing ovation from a sellout crowd at T-Mobile Park.

The Dodgers scored early and often against Mariners right-hander Bryce Miller (4-6). Hyeseong Kim hit a two-run home run in the second inning and Freddie Freeman added a two-run shot in the third.

After Miller departed , Los Angeles two-way star Shohei Ohtani hit his franchise-record 55th home run of the season. Andy Pages added an RBI single in the eighth inning to complete the Dodgers’ scoring.

Seattle slugger Cal Raleigh went 1 for 3 in his regular-season finale, finishing with 125 RBIs and a major league-leading 60 homers.

The NL West champion Dodgers (93-69) won five fewer games than last year, while the AL West-winning Mariners (90-72) won five more games.

Seattle drew 2,537,817 fans this season, just shy of its 2024 total of 2,555,813.

Key moment

With two away in a scoreless contest, Kim turned on an elevated fastball from Miller and sent it into the right-field seats for the third home run of the rookie’s major league career.

Key stat

Ohtani’s 55th home run topped the single-season record he set in 2024 for the Dodgers, his first season with the franchise. He also topped 100 RBIs for the third time in his MLB career.

Up next

The Dodgers will face the Cincinnati Reds in Game 1 of the NL Wild Card series on Tuesday.

The Mariners will take on the winner of the first-round series between the Detroit Tigers and Cleveland Guardians in the AL Division Series starting Saturday.