The MLB postseason is right around the corner. And with less than two weeks left in the regular season, every team with World Series aspirations still has a lot to play for.
Let’s break down the state of the MLB standings and the playoff picture as it looks today.
Who has clinched a spot in the playoffs?
The Brewers clinched the NL Central title on Wednesday but have not yet clinched their playoff seed.
Subscribe to Baseball Bar-B-Cast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you listen.
Who can clinch next?
The Dodgers, Phillies, Orioles, Yankees and Guardians all have at least a 99% chance of reaching the postseason, according to FanGraphs. The Astros, Royals and Padres are above 90%. The Diamondbacks, Twins and Mets have the postseason in sight but still have a ways to go to get there.
After statistically securing their postseason spots, the Brewers, Phillies, Dodgers, Guardians, Astros and Yankees are positioned to win their divisions, assuming their current leads hold. The Phillies, Dodgers, Yankees and Guardians are in line to earn byes through the wild-card round.
What’s still up for grabs?
Once a team clinches its ticket to the postseason, there’s still a lot to play for. Most of the division leads are comfortable, but teams could be battling for playoff positioning until the final weekend of the season.
The Nos. 1 and 2 seeds in each league will go to the division winners with the two best records. Those teams earn a bye through the wild-card round and hosting rights in the division series.
The No. 3 seed will go to the third division winner, and that team will host a three-game wild-card series against the No. 6 seed (which will go to the third wild card). The top wild-card team will earn the No. 4 seed and hosting duties against the No. 5 seed in the wild-card round.
The higher seed also gets home-field advantage in the championship series, once we get that far.
What would the playoff bracket look like if the season ended today?
American League
Wild card: No. 6 Minnesota Twins vs. No. 3 Houston Astros
ALDS: Wild-card winner vs. No. 2 Cleveland Guardians
Wild card: No. 5 Kansas City Royals vs. No. 4 Baltimore Orioles
ALDS: Wild-card winner vs. No. 1 New York Yankees
National League
Wild card: No. 6 Arizona Diamondbacks vs. No. 3 Milwaukee Brewers
NLDS: Wild-card winner vs. No. 2 Los Angeles Dodgers
Wild card: No. 5 New York Mets vs. No. 4 San Diego Padres
NLDS: Wild-card winner vs. No. 1 Philadelphia Phillies
What are the tiebreakers?
No longer do teams play a Game 163 if they finish the season tied. Instead, tiebreakers are determined by head-to-head records first and, if needed, intradivision records second.
Here are the tiebreakers that could come into play:
The Yankees have clinched the tiebreaker against the Guardians.
The Guardians have clinched the tiebreaker against the Orioles.
The Phillies have clinched the tiebreaker against the Dodgers.
The Mets have clinched the tiebreakers against the Padres and Diamondbacks.
The Orioles hold the tiebreaker against the Yankees, with three games left to play.
The D-backs hold the tiebreaker against the Padres, with three games left to play.
The Mets hold the tiebreaker against the Braves, with three games left to play.
What’s the schedule for the wild-card and division series?
Wild-card series
Game 1: Tuesday, Oct. 1
Game 2: Wednesday, Oct. 2
Game 3: Thursday, Oct. 3*
Division series
ALDS
Game 1: Saturday, Oct. 5
Game 2: Monday, Oct. 7
Game 3: Wednesday, Oct. 9
Game 4: Thursday, Oct. 10*
Game 5: Saturday, Oct. 12*
NLDS
Game 1: Saturday, Oct. 5
Game 2: Sunday, Oct. 6
Game 3: Tuesday, Oct. 8
Game 4: Wednesday, Oct. 9*
Game 5: Friday, Oct. 11*
(*if necessary)