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Browsing: Reds
This story was excerpted from Mark Sheldon’s Reds Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.
CINCINNATI — The Reds achieved a long-awaited goal by making the postseason with 83 wins in 2025 in their first year with Terry Francona as their manager. As important as that first step was, there is much work to do in order to win more regular-season games, go deeper in the playoffs and, ultimately, reach the World Series.
As Cincinnati begins its offseason with sights set on 2026, here are five questions facing the club.
1. Where and how can the Reds add offense?
The Reds ranked in the bottom half of MLB in most offensive categories this year, but among the ones that stood out were 21st in home runs (167), 24th in weighted runs created (92 wRC+) and 28th in hard-hit rate (38.2 percent). They were ninth in strikeouts. Situational hitting was a big weakness, with a 3-12 record in extra-inning games underscoring that issue the most.
“Obviously [with] more frequency of contact, youâ€ll be able to hit home runs in this ballpark. Thatâ€s something weâ€ve got to improve across the board,” president of baseball operations Nick Krall said.
Cincinnati will need to find a hitter, or two, for the middle of the order. Among positions in flux are left field, first base and designated hitter. Whether or not there is enough financial maneuverability will be a factor in the clubâ€s ability to make those additions.
2. Would trading Hunter Greene help bring back a bat?
Greene, a 2024 All-Star and two-time Opening Day starter, is signed through ‘28. The right-hander with triple-digit velocity has shown he can be a dominant force on the mound, but that ability has been stunted by extended stints on the IL in each of his four big league seasons. The injuries the past three seasons were considered relatively minor, including the Grade 1 right groin strain that cost him over two months this season. He’s never pitched more than 150 1/3 innings or made more than 26 starts.
Even after a disappointing postseason debut vs. the Dodgers in Game 1 of the National League Wild Card Series, Greene still could be an attractive trade chip in the Reds’ pockets. Moving him would free up salary to sign a bat this offseason or bring back a hitter in return, and a change of scenery could benefit him.
This can’t be a salary dump for prospects, however. If Greene is traded, Major League talent would have to come back to make it work.
“I donâ€t want to speculate on anybody thatâ€s going to get traded or not get traded at this point,” Krall responded when asked about Greene’s trade potential. “Because we havenâ€t had any conversations with other clubs, I donâ€t know what the needs are out there. I donâ€t know what people are available as well.â€
3. Is there enough starting pitching?
Wait, wasn’t a case just made for Greene to be traded? Well, there’s a case not to trade him also. While Greene, Andrew Abbott, Nick Lodolo, Brady Singer and Chase Burns could all come back, three other young starters in Rhett Lowder (right forearm, left oblique), Julian Aguiar (right elbow) and Brandon Williamson (left elbow) missed all of 2025. Their innings — along with Burns in his second pro season — would have to be managed while protecting their arm health. Like Greene, Lodolo has never had an injury-free season as well. Zack Littell and swingman Nick Martinez will also be free agents with no guarantees of their returns.
“You can come up short real fast if you start looking to move pitching,” general manager Brad Meador said.
4. Will the bullpen need rebuilding?
The Reds†bullpen really found its groove down the stretch. Closer Emilio Pagán (2.88 ERA, 32 saves) and setup man Tony Santillan (80 appearances) formed a strong back end with several big arms leading up to them. But Pagán and Martinez will be free agents, while Scott Barlow and Brent Suter have club options for 2026. Pagán has expressed interest in returning, but without a known budget for next year, it’s unclear if it will happen.
Graham Ashcraft, Connor Phillips, Zach Maxwell and Luis Mey are among the hard-throwers returning, and all will factor for spots. A former starter prospect, Phillips especially seemed to find a home as a reliever the final weeks of the season. But Krall and Meador have often been successful finding veteran relievers via Minor League contracts and on the waiver wire. They could be pressed into finding replacements, including a new closer.
5. Can the defense be improved?
While there was a statistical improvement from 2024, the Reds still must do a better job defensively. For the second year in a row, shortstop Elly De La Cruz led the Majors in errors (26), and often in crucial moments, there were defensive lapses in making proper cut-off throws or just plays when they had to be made.
The trade for third baseman Ke’Bryan Hayes — a perennial Gold Glove contender and 2023 winner — helped the infield. Spencer Steer played first base full time and developed quickly into a superb defender. But despite the solid work of center fielder TJ Friedl, the overall outfield defense ranked poorly in outs above average (-12) and runs prevented (-11).
“We were towards the bottom of the league in defense,” Krall said. “We did a good job with defensive efficiency, but our defensive range and everything could be better across the board.â€
Roki Sasaki closes out Reds as Dodgers win NLDS
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7:28 AM UTC
The Los Angeles Dodgers are headed back to the National League Division Series.
Led by a strong performance from Mookie Betts, the Dodgers swept the Cincinnati Reds in their NL Wild Card Series matchup with an impressive 8-4 win in Game 2 on Wednesday night.
Betts finished 4-for-5 with three RBI in the victory.
Los Angeles will now face the Philadelphia Phillies in the NLDS, as fans looked forward to the upcoming matchup.
Cincinnati struck first in Wednesday’s contest, scoring two runs in the top of the opening frame with a sacrifice fly from Tyler Stephenson and Sal Stewart’s RBI single.
The Dodgers scored once in the third inning before taking their first lead of the game in the fourth, as a run-scoring double from Kiké Hernandez and RBI single from Miguel Rojas gave Los Angeles a 3-2 edge.
Cincinnati couldn’t respond right away, as the Dodgers gained some more separation with a four-run sixth inning that was highlighted by RBI doubles from Betts and Teoscar Hernández. Shohei Ohtani also chipped in with his own RBI.
Another RBI double by Betts in the seventh gave Los Angeles a lead of 8-2. The Reds scored two runs in the top of the eighth inning, but ultimately couldn’t pull any closer.
Yoshinobu Yamamoto started for the Dodgers, allowing four hits without giving up an earned run. He also racked up nine strikeouts compared to just two walks in 6.2 innings of work.
Yamamoto ran into some trouble in the sixth inning as the Reds loaded the bases with no outs, but a fielder’s choice and two strikeouts kept Cincinnati off the board.
Los Angeles’ lineup exploded offensively, with seven players accounting for the team’s 13 total hits.
The Dodgers ended up outscoring the Reds 18-9 in the series.
Now, Game 1 between Los Angeles and Philadelphia is set for Saturday.
LOS ANGELES — Donâ€t expect the Cincinnati Reds to pitch around Shohei Ohtani in Game 2 of their wild-card series against the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Manager Terry Francona has too much respect for the former league MVPs who bat second and third in the Dodgers†lineup.
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Asked before Wednesday’s game if heâ€d consider intentionally walking Ohtani, Francona scoffed and said, “Youâ€re kidding, right? Have you heard of Mookie Betts or Freddie Freeman?â€
Francona described Ohtani as “a really dangerous hitter†but also pointed out that the two-way star struck out 187 times during the regular season, third-most in the National League.
“Thatâ€s where we have to get to,†Francona said. “You start walking people in that lineup, and youâ€re asking for trouble.â€
The Reds attacked Ohtani in their 10-5 Game 1 loss to the Dodgers on Tuesday — and while the superstar struck out three times, he also made them pay with a pair of home runs.
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He opened the bottom of the first inning by turning on a 100-mph inside fastball from Reds fireballer Hunter Greene and rocketing a screaming line drive over the right-field wall. Then in the sixth inning, with chants of M-V-P raining down from the upper deck, Ohtani blasted a 454-foot moon shot high into the right-center-field bleachers.
Ohtani piled up 55 home runs and 102 RBI during another MVP-caliber regular season, but even so, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts raved Tuesday about Ohtaniâ€s ability to raise his level in the postseason.
“His focus gets more keen, and the at-bat quality is better,†Roberts said. “Thatâ€s a reason why he signed to be with this ball club, this organization, to play in games like this, to showcase his otherworldly talent. I expect really fun things this postseason out of Shohei.â€
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Before the wild-card series began, Francona also spoke glowingly of Ohtani, calling him a “generational player.â€
“You don’t want to let him get those arms extended,†he said Monday. “You make a mistake, and it goes a long way, a long way.â€
But as much respect as Francona has for Ohtani, he wonâ€t give the Dodgers’ slugger the Barry Bonds treatment.
Said Francona on Wednesday: “I think it would be a very poor decision.â€
Alden GonzalezOct 1, 2025, 02:23 AM ET
- ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the L.A. Rams for ESPN from 2016 to 2018 and the L.A. Angels for MLB.com from 2012 to 2016.
LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers ended a lethargic, inconsistent regular season in dominant fashion, reeling off 15 wins in a stretch of 20 games. All told, they finished with 93 victories, their lowest total in seven years and a far cry from the wins record so many outsiders pegged them for at the outset. It forced them to play in the wild-card round for the first time since Major League Baseball’s postseason format expanded. But they believed they had found their best selves heading into the playoffs.
Then — for seven innings, at least — it showed up.
The Dodgers chased young Cincinnati Reds fireballer Hunter Greene after just three innings in Tuesday night’s Game 1 of their National League Wild Card Series. Teoscar Hernandez and Shohei Ohtani each homered twice for L.A., five different hitters collected multiple hits and Blake Snell dominated in his Dodgers postseason debut, allowing just two runs in seven innings. If not for a faulty bullpen, the Dodgers’ introduction to the 2025 postseason would have been a laugher. They nonetheless settled for a 10-5 victory, putting them one win away from advancing to the NL Division Series against the Philadelphia Phillies.
“We’ve been playing pretty good baseball the last two weeks, three weeks,” Hernandez said. “We know the things that we can do, especially in big moments like this.”
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Ohtani started the scoring with a 117.7 mph line-drive home run to lead off the bottom of the first, prompting flashbacks of the shot he hit off Dylan Cease in his second career postseason at-bat last fall. In the fourth, Ohtani tacked on a 454-foot homer, becoming the first player in the Statcast era (since 2015) to hit home runs of 450-plus feet and 115-plus mph in the same playoff game.
In between, the Dodgers put together a four-run third inning with the middle of their order. Freddie Freeman and Max Muncy worked walks against Greene. Hernandez then turned on a 1-0 slider that hung up in the zone for a three-run homer. Tommy Edman followed with another homer off another slider, this one on the edge of the inside corner.
“That was definitely a huge moment in the game — really pushed momentum out and really made them start to make the decision to get Hunter Greene out of the game,” Muncy said of that third inning. “Anytime you can do that, that puts you in a very good spot. Because Hunter Greene’s a very good pitcher. I know we got to him tonight, but that’s still not the guy you want to have in the game for a long time.”
Snell, meanwhile, pitched longer than he ever has in October. The 32-year-old left-hander — famously removed after giving up his first hit in the sixth inning of Game 6 of the 2020 World Series, a decision that propelled the Dodgers to a championship — breezed past the Reds in the first six innings and wound up tying a postseason career high with nine strikeouts. Five of those came on his changeup, a pitch that drew 15 swing-and-misses from a young, eager group of Reds hitters, the most of any start in Snell’s career. Varying the speed of that pitch was key.
“He’d throw one that was 87 [mph] and one that was 82,” Reds manager Terry Francona said. “And he threw multiple — like two, three, four in a row at times and all different speeds. And then you throw a 97 [mph fastball] in there and it becomes difficult.”
The Reds trailed 10-2 after seven innings. In the 164 instances a team faced a deficit of eight-plus runs in the postseason, only one had come back to win. It happened all the way back in 1929, during Game 4 of the World Series. The then-Philadelphia Athletics trailed the Chicago Cubs 8-0 in the seventh inning and rallied to pull out a 10-8 victory. The Reds came close to joining them. At least that’s what 50,555 increasingly tense Dodger Stadium fans began to feel as the eighth inning prolonged.
L.A.’s Alex Vesia faced three batters, allowed two of them to reach and exited. Edgardo Henriquez, who possesses overpowering stuff but often lacks control of it, issued back-to-back walks and a single. Jack Dreyer, a rookie left-hander coming off a breakthrough season, followed with another walk to trim the Dodgers’ lead to five. But Dreyer retired Tyler Stephenson to end an 11-pitch at-bat then got Ke’Bryan Hayes to ground out, stranding the bases loaded. Blake Treinen followed with a much easier ninth inning, allowing a sold-out crowd to exhale.
Dodgers relievers threw 59 pitches in that anxiety-inducing top of the eighth, the most in a single playoff inning since at least 1988, according to ESPN Research.
But the Dodgers got the win, and history is on their side:
Of the previous four editions of the wild-card series, the Game 1 winner has advanced 18 of 20 times.
“You can’t make it more than what it is,” Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts said of potentially closing out the Reds on Wednesday. “It’s just a game. It’s still a game. Still got to go do the same thing. We’re not going to all of a sudden become Superman, do different things. Just have to play the same game.”
Things swing quickly in a best-of-three series. The Reds are already up against it, while the Dodgers are just a win away from moving on.
“Our backs have been against the wall for a couple of months now,” Reds second baseman Matt McLain said. “Just go out there, play hard, play the game the right way, the way we know how to play. Weâ€ll be good.â€
The Dodgers are hopeful that they can ride the momentum from their big night at the plate to set up a date with the Phillies in the NL Division Series, continuing their title defense.
“Offensively, we’re in a really good place right now,” Dodgers infielder Miguel Rojas said. “[In Game 1], it was the offense. We know for sure it’s going to be a full effort of the whole roster right here to win this other game.”
When is the game and how can I watch it?
First pitch for Game 2 of the Reds-Dodgers Wild Card Series is set for 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT on Wednesday at Dodger Stadium. The game will be broadcast on ESPN.
All series are available in the US on MLB.TV with authentication to a participating Pay TV provider. Games also are available live internationally, although not in Canada.
Who are the starting pitchers?
Reds: Zack Littell (10-8, 3.81 ERA)
Littell got the assignment for Game 2, in part, because he will be able to work on his normal four days†rest. Acquired before the Trade Deadline from the Rays, he was 2-0 with a 4.39 ERA in 10 starts after switching teams. Littell has five games of postseason experience, all in relief. That includes two games vs. the Dodgers while with the Giants in the 2021 NL Division Series. He threw 2 2/3 innings, with three runs and five strikeouts. Down the stretch this season, Littell often endured trouble the second or third times through a lineup and he was given an early hook. It would seem quite possible that manager Terry Francona could switch to lefty Nick Lodolo early in a sort of tandem start.
Dodgers: Yoshinobu Yamamoto (12-8, 2.49 ERA)
Last postseason, Yamamoto showed why the Dodgers were willing to give him a record deal for a pitcher before he had even thrown a pitch in the Majors. After giving up five runs in three innings in his postseason debut against the Padres, he rebounded by holding opponents to three runs in 15 2/3 innings during the rest of the Dodgers’ World Series run.
Yamamoto built upon his strong finish to his first year in MLB and broke out in his sophomore season, anchoring L.A.’s rotation as the only pitcher who did not miss a start due to injury. He faced the Reds earlier this year, striking out nine across seven innings of one-run ball on July 28 in Cincinnati.
What might the starting lineups look like?
Reds: With a right-hander going in Yamamoto, the Reds will likely tweak their lineup slightly to get Gavin Lux’s lefty bat in there. But after being shut down in Game 1, it’s also possible Francona might try to inject more offense by adding Sal Stewart’s bat, even if he is right-handed.
Dodgers: With the Reds deploying another right-handed starter, the Game 2 lineup shouldn’t look too different than the series opener, although Miguel Rojas could work his way into the mix as the Dodgers manage Tommy Edman’s ankle. Manager Dave Roberts did not rule out the possibility of Will Smith (hairline fracture in right hand) starting a game behind the plate, although the All-Star catcher seems more likely to remain on the bench for the time being.
How will the bullpens line up after the starter?
Reds: In Game 1, middle reliever Scott Barlow retired all five of his batters with four strikeouts after replacing Hunter Greene in the fourth inning. Connor Phillips was used in the loss as well and gave up homers to Teoscar Hernández in the fifth inning and to Ohtani in the sixth. Although Graham Ashcraft was used in the eighth inning, the Reds avoided using their two other back-end relievers in setup man Tony Santillan and closer Emilio Pagán — who saved 32 games in the regular season. Obviously, with it being an elimination game, all hands will be on deck to pitch whatever is necessary to avoid a quick elimination.
Dodgers: Alex Vesia, Edgardo Henriquez, Jack Dreyer and Blake Treinen all pitched in Game 1. Roberts has yet to use Tyler Glasnow and Emmet Sheehan — who have shifted to the bullpen for this series — and could lean on them to cover bulk innings as the Dodgers try to close out the Wild Card Series.
Dodgers: Smith is playing through the injury to his right hand — and could possibly catch if needed — but he is more likely to be used primarily as a pinch-hitter this series. Edman will have to continue to manage his right ankle, which landed him on the IL twice earlier this year. Kiké Hernández exited Game 1 with back tightness, but Roberts said the utility man is expected to be in the lineup for Game 2.
Who is hot and who is not?
Reds: In Game 1, Steer continued his strong September with two hits that included an RBI single. Steer also hit four homers over the last 10 regular season games. After he struggled mightily over the final weeks of the season, McLain hit a two-out double in the third inning and a single in the eighth inning on Tuesday. On the other hand, Hayes went 0-for-4 to continue his rough stretch that ended the regular season with him going 3-for-37 (.081) over his final 14 games.
Dodgers: Teoscar Hernández, who ended the regular season on a six-game hitting streak, went 3-for-5 with a pair of homers on Tuesday night. Kiké Hernández also built some momentum toward the end of the regular season and went 2-for-3 before exiting due to his back. Muncy went hitless in Game 1 and ended the regular season hitting .118 with a .562 OPS in his final 11 games, although he was dealing with some lower body soreness that he said affected his swing at the time.
Anything else fans might want to know?
OK, Shohei
Shohei Ohtani picked up in the postseason where he left off another likely MVP regular season — with a bang. Ohtani took his usual leadoff spot in the Dodgers’ lineup for Game 1 of their wild-card series against the Reds Tuesday night.
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He worked Reds starter Hunter Greene to a 2-1 count. Greene responded with a 100 mph fastball over the inside corner of the plate. Ohtani turned on it and deposited a laser into the right-field bleachers at Dodger Stadium.
ESPN’s Jon Sciambi barely had time to call the home run before it was over the wall for a 1-0 Dodgers lead.
There’s good reason. The home run was a first-of-its-kind. Or at least a first-of-its-kind in the Statcast era.
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The ball left Ohtani’s bat at 117.7 mph and traveled 375 feet on a line drive. That’s the fastest home run hit off a 100-plus mph pitch since Statcast started tracking such stats in 2015. By a long shot.
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Per MLB Stats, then-Red Sox slugger Rafael Devers previously held the distinction with a 113.7 mph blast off a 100 mph Gerrit Cole fastball against the Yankees on June 27, 2021. Ohtani’s exit velocity Tuesday bested Devers’ by a full 4 mph.
Ohtani’s home run is also one of the hardest hit of any kind in the postseason in the Statcast era. Per MLB.com’s Sarah Langs, only Kyle Schwarber, Giancarlo Stanton and Ohtani himself have hit harder home runs since 2015.
It adds up to a stellar start to Ohtani’s postseason. At this point, we shouldn’t expect anything less.
The Dodgers admitted to doing some scoreboard-watching on Sunday as the reigning World Series champions awaited their first-round opponent. Once the dust settled from Game 162, the Reds had edged the Mets for the final NL Wild Card spot.
Los Angeles’ bid to become the first team in a quarter century to win back-to-back championships will begin with Cincinnati, making its first postseason appearance since 2020 — and its first in a full season since 2013.
“You donâ€t play the game on paper, so weâ€ve got to have that edge weâ€ve talked about,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “They can pitch and theyâ€re athletic. Theyâ€ve got a great manager whoâ€s won a couple championships. Weâ€ve got to be ready, and we are ready.”
As recently as Sept. 16, the Reds were a game under .500. They won eight of their last 11 games to seize control of their destiny and set up a date with the Dodgers, who are playing in the Wild Card round for the first time since the best-of-three format was adopted in 2022.
“We have a fresh start,” Reds left-hander Andrew Abbott said. “We know what weâ€ve got to do. Put our heads down and go to work. Itâ€s not going to be easy. We know that.â€
When is the game and how can I watch it?
First pitch for Game 1 of the Reds-Dodgers Wild Card Series is set for 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT on Tuesday at Dodger Stadium. The game will be broadcast on ESPN.
All series are available in the US on MLB.TV with authentication to a participating Pay TV provider. Games also are available live internationally, although not in Canada.
Who are the probable starting pitchers?
A Los Angeles native, Greene will be in the postseason for the first time. Cincinnati’s Opening Day starter, he brings triple-digit velocity and a strong slider. He missed over two months dealing with a mild right groin strain, which derailed what was a superb start to his season.
But after returning in August, Greene was 3-1 with a 2.81 ERA in eight starts in 48 innings. He walked 12 and struck out 59 in that stretch. Against the Dodgers earlier this season, he did not fare well. During a 7-0 loss on Aug. 25 at Dodger Stadium, he gave up five runs (three earned) over five innings, including a pair of homers to Andy Pages.
After signing a five-year, $182 million deal to join the Dodgers this past offseason, Snell missed four months with a shoulder injury. Once he returned in August, the two-time Cy Young Award winner helped transform the Dodgers’ rotation into arguably the team’s biggest strength.
Snell did not face the Reds this year, but he tossed his first career no-hitter against them last year in Cincinnati while with the Giants. He last appeared in the postseason with the Padres in 2022.
What might the starting lineups look like?
Reds: It’s often been a feast or famine offense this season for the Reds, which ranked 21st in MLB in home runs with 167. Over their last 12 games, Cincinnati was held to two or fewer runs seven times. But they often find a way to win, especially because of their pitching. Because the Dodgers are starting a lefty in Snell, lefty-hitting Gavin Lux isn’t expected to get a start in Game 1. Expect to see the former Dodger enter the game if Los Angeles brings in a right-hander.
Dodgers: The top five in the lineup shouldn’t change much from night to night, led by the three MVPs: Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman. There could be more variation among the bottom four, including some changes based on right-left splits. This figures to be the Dodgers’ nearly full-strength lineup vs. a right-handed starter, with the exception of the injured Will Smith.
How will the bullpens line up after the starter?
Reds: Relievers really stepped up in the final weeks of the season — especially the back-end guys. Emilio Pagán saved 32 games, and even pitched four days in a row on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday when it was sorely needed. Eighth-inning reliever Tony Santillan was second in MLB with 80 appearances. Graham Ashcraft has often been used in the seventh inning. There are good options to bridge the middle innings with swingman Nick Martinez, rookie flamethrower Chase Burns and Connor Phillips. All could pitch in leverage situations, if needed.
Reds: Hays missed six games with back spasms during the final week of the regular season. He was able to pinch-hit in the eighth inning and play defense on Sunday, which was a good sign that he can be ready for the playoffs. Left-hander Nick Lodolo, who had right groin soreness during his final start on Thursday and left early, appeared in relief on Sunday and looked to be healthy. But he will be used out of the bullpen during this round.
Dodgers: Smith’s availability for the first round of the postseason remains up in the air as he recovers from a hairline fracture in his right hand. It is a possibility that the Dodgers could carry three catchers on the roster if he is close to a return, but not quite there yet. Muncy (lower body) and Edman (right ankle) are also playing through some lingering discomfort, although neither is expected to be compromised for Game 1.
Who is hot and who is not?
Reds: De La Cruz, who endured a massive home run drought in the summer, picked it up again with three homers over the last nine games and led the club with 22. Sal Stewart, who was called up on Sept. 1 to make his big league debut, led the team this month with five homers. Steer hit four homers over his previous 11 games. On the flip side, it’s been a rough season for McLain, but especially lately. Over his final 12 games, he batted .132 (5-for-38) with 18 strikeouts.
Dodgers: Ohtani (slashed .312/.423/.742 in September, 14 2/3-inning scoreless streak) and Betts (.317/.376/.516 since Aug. 5) have built some momentum heading into the postseason. It has been an especially impressive turnaround for Betts, who weathered an extensive slump through the two-thirds of the season.
Since coming off the IL in early September, both Edman (.209/.222/.279) and Muncy (.118/.268/.294) have scuffled. If their nagging injuries worsen or their troubles at the plate continue, that could create opportunities for postseason standout Kiké Hernández.
Anything else fans might want to know?
Now the fun really begins.
After six months of regular-season action and a whole bunch of stunning plot twists over the final couple of weeks, weâ€ve arrived at the 2025 postseason. We can say goodbye to the 18 teams that fell short and shift our focus to the dozen teams still vying for a World Series title.
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The regular season provided plenty of data to help us evaluate these clubs†chances of winning a championship, but the beginning of the postseason is also a reset of sorts. How exactly these teams got to this point doesnâ€t matter as much as who can step up and perform when the stakes are raised. And if recent history tells us anything, predicting which teams are about to embark on memorable runs and which will flame out in a hurry is a nearly impossible task.
With all that in mind, hereâ€s how the 12 playoff teams stack up at the outset of October — with a case for each to be the last team standing.
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Jump to a team by clicking on the links below:
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12. Cincinnati Reds (83-79)
Cincinnati seized the opportunity afforded by the Mets†epic, second-half collapse to earn its first postseason berth since 2020. Its reward for qualifying is a trip to Los Angeles to face the defending champions in the wild-card round, with Shohei Ohtani lined up for Game 1 on Tuesday.
As daunting as that opening assignment appears, the good news for the Reds is that they might just have the pitching necessary to pull off the ultimate upset — and perhaps catch fire and play deep into October. That starts with ace Hunter Greene, who will get the ball in Game 1 for Cincinnati. Although injuries limited him to just 19 starts this season, Greene was the best version of himself when healthy and looked especially sharp in September.
Heâ€s the unquestioned headliner here, but Cincinnati also boasts two stellar southpaws in All-Star Andrew Abbott and Nick Lodolo, a duo who helped the Reds†rotation rank second in MLB in fWAR, behind only Philadelphia. Steady closer Emilio Pagan and workhorse Tony Santillan (80 appearances!) lead an underrated bullpen that also features fireballing rookie righty Chase Burns.
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Itâ€s a much more modest position-player group, but Elly De La Cruz has the kind of star power that could shine especially bright on the postseason stage. Add a manager in Terry Francona who is intimately familiar with success in October, and the Reds might have what it takes to go on a surprise run. But for a franchise that hasnâ€t won a playoff series since 1995 — the longest drought in MLB — itâ€s one step at a time.
11. Detroit Tigers (87-75)
Blown division lead be damned, Detroit is in, and as manager AJ Hinch said during the teamâ€s clinch celebration Saturday, everybody is 0-0 starting on Tuesday. If the Tigers can successfully embrace that symbolic reset and rediscover what helped them build an enormous division lead in the first place, they could become dangerous in a hurry.
It will take more than just Tarik Skubal pitching like the best pitcher on the planet, though thatâ€s an awfully good place to start and not an advantage that should be overlooked. The “pitching chaos†beyond Skubal has been a far less reliable strategy recently, but there are some fresh faces who werenâ€t part of last yearâ€s staff but could play pivotal roles this time around, such as Jack Flaherty and rookie Troy Melton.
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Most importantly, the position-player core of Riley Greene and Spencer Torkelson, plus veteran Gleyber Torres, will need to deliver a far more cohesive offense than what weâ€ve seen recently. As evidenced by what this club demonstrated collectively in the first half, the Tigers have the talent to do so, but itâ€s time to flip the switch. The wild-card series in Cleveland offers an incredible mulligan for the Tigers to erase a miserable and embarrassing chapter in the franchiseâ€s history and recapture the momentum to push further into October than they went last year.
10. Cleveland Guardians (88-74)
A 10-game losing streak to fall 15.5 games behind the Tigers on July 6. Losing two key pitchers to a gambling investigation. Dealing away Shane Bieber at the trade deadline. Losing nine of 10 in late August. The lowest team batting average and second-lowest OPS in all of baseball. A minus-6 run differential. Add it all up, and you get … the AL Central champions.
For all the absurdities surrounding Clevelandâ€s improbable run to a division title, the recipe for success has actually been somewhat simple. With a breakout frontline arm in Gavin Williams, a worthy No. 2 in Tanner Bibee, enough moxie from the rest of the rotation to fuel a historic stretch of run prevention, plus a fantastic bullpen and a terrific defense, it is difficult to score against the Guardians. That foundational strength helps compensate for their objectively meager offense, as do the presences of All-Star Steven Kwan and future Hall of Famer José Ramirez atop the lineup. Ramirezâ€s all-around ability, relentless hustle and unwavering confidence have helped elevate the performance of the less-proven position players surrounding him in the lineup.
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If his splendid debut season as skipper wasnâ€t compelling enough, Stephen Vogtâ€s knack for steady leadership and motivation have been on full display during this tumultuous campaign. Defeating Detroit againto put an exclamation point on their advantage in the rivalry would be incredible enough, but the Guardians will have a lot to prove should they advance further and take on the other American League contenders. Letâ€s see if they can keep proving everyone wrong.
How the 12 playoff teams got to this point doesnâ€t matter nearly as much as who can step up and perform when the stakes are highest. (Mallory Bielecki/Yahoo Sports)
9. San Diego Padres (90-72)
A year ago, many pegged the Padres as the most dangerous team entering October, leading to high expectations before San Diegoâ€s disappointing elimination in the NLDS against the rival Dodgers. This yearâ€s club arrives in the postseason with notably less hype — and maybe thatâ€s a good thing. While the 2025 Padres donâ€t possess quite as many statistical markers of a bona fide contender, there are plenty of impressive ingredients that could spark a run to the franchiseâ€s first World Series championship.
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The aggressive trade-deadline acquisition of Mason Miller supercharged an already-loaded bullpen that ranks at or near the top of the league in every major measure and still has an argument as the best relief corps in October, even after the season-ending injury to All-Star Jason Adam. That elite group of arms for manager Mike Shildt to turn to at the end of games lessens the pressure on a talented but volatile rotation; Michael King, Nick Pivetta, Yu Darvish and Dylan Cease each seem as likely to deliver six shutout innings as they are to get bombarded in the early frames. The Padres†upside on the mound across the board is undeniable, but consistency will be key.
On offense, the Padres feature a wealth of recognizable stars sans the commensurate statistics to match. San Diego lags significantly far behind in the slugging department, ranking 28th in MLB in homers with just 152 — far and away the fewest of any playoff team — and its .390 slugging percentage ranks ahead of only Cleveland. Thatâ€s a full-season sample of less-than-stellar production, but there are several hitters in this lineup worth taking seriously, from Manny Machado to Fernando Tatis Jr. to an ascendant star in Jackson Merrill who is finally healthy after an injury-marred summer and has looked outstanding in September. The bones of a truly great team are still intact for San Diego; now itâ€s time to perform when it counts.
8. Boston Red Sox (89-73)
After a drama-filled first half featuring the shocking decision to trade Rafael Devers to San Francisco, Boston gradually found enough stability down the stretch to avoid missing the postseason for a fourth consecutive year, which wouldâ€ve been the longest stretch without playoff baseball in Boston since the early 1990s. Now manager Alex Cora is back in October with a roster that looks nothing like the crew that made it to the 2021 ALCS; reliever Garrett Whitlock is the only participant from that series who remains on the active roster. Well, from the Red Sox anyway: New Boston third baseman and former Astros nemesis Alex Bregman has now made it to the playoffs in nine consecutive seasons, while his old buddies in Houston were left on the outside looking in for the first time since 2016.
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Bregman is a crucial cog for a Red Sox lineup that feels one impact bat short, a glaring reality since the Devers trade but also one that has been felt more acutely with star rookie Roman Anthony on the injured list due to an oblique strain. Perhaps the Red Sox play deep enough into October for Anthony to return at some point, but regardless, Bostonâ€s path to postseason success is rooted in its strengths on the mound, with utterly dominant presences headlining both the rotation (Garrett Crochet) and bullpen (Aroldis Chapman). If the second-level starters (Lucas Giolito, Brayan Bello) and relievers (Whitlock, Justin Slaten, Greg Weissert) step up behind the two monsters leading their respective units, the Red Sox could absolutely make some noise. The rival Yankees await in the Bronx for an ultra-juicy wild-card series.
7. Chicago Cubs (92-70)
The Cubs havenâ€t won a playoff game since 2017. That might not sound like an especially long time for a franchise that went 108 years between championships, but itâ€s a fairly substantial drought considering Chicagoâ€s status as one of baseballâ€s marquee clubs. The path to restoring the Cubs†status as relevant postseason characters involves a combination of steady starting pitching and a return to form for an offense that was arguably baseballâ€s best in the first half.
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The latter involves the likes of Michael Busch and Ian Happ continuing to rake like they have recently, with Pete Crow-Armstrong and Seiya Suzuki rediscovering what made them such dynamic players earlier in the year. Then thereâ€s Kyle Tucker, the wildly talented and fascinating free-agent-to-be whose overall impact coming off a calf injury that cost him most of September is a critical factor to consider and a difficult one to project. But if Tucker and this lineup start to find their groove, watch out.
Itâ€s a bit more complicated on the mound, with the brutal news of rookie Cade Hortonâ€s rib fracture putting substantial pressure on left-handers Matthew Boyd and Shota Imanaga to deliver quality outings from the get-go. This is not a pitching staff that is going to match up with those of some other contenders in the National League from a stuff standpoint, but you can generally rely on the Cubs†arms to throw strikes and not beat themselves, a mindset empowered by having arguably the gameâ€s best defense playing behind them. San Diego is a staunch first opponent, but donâ€t rule this Cubs team out too quickly.
6. New York Yankees (94-68)
With the best hitter since Barry Bonds in Aaron Judge, two elite left-handers in Max Fried and Carlos Rodón and a deep lineup with an overwhelming amount of over-the-fence power, New York certainly looks the part of a viable contender. The challenge for the Yankees will be overcoming the reputation earned over the past year — in last yearâ€s World Series and throughout a particularly uninspiring run in June and July — that they will falter against top-tier competition when the stakes are high and that their shortcomings in the nuances of the game will resurface at the worst possible time. At the same time, the talent on this roster suggests the Yankees have as good a chance at glory as any, particularly in this yearâ€s wide-open American League field.
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Judgeâ€s outsized presence as a historically great slugger speaks for itself — though itâ€s no secret that Yankees fans will be hoping for a lot more than the .184/.344/.408 slash line he mustered last October — but this position-player group can beat you in myriad ways. Itâ€s Cody Bellingerâ€s rock-solid presence on both sides of the ball, Jazz Chisholm Jr.â€s power-speed dynamism, big swings from Trent Grisham and Ben Riceâ€s bountiful breakout. And donâ€t forget Giancarlo Stanton; he has hit a handful of homers in October, if I recall correctly.
Thereâ€s tremendous talent on the mound as well, albeit far more unpredictable in nature, with rookies Will Warren and Cam Schlittler in the rotation and several volatile pieces in the bullpen (Devin Williams, Camilo Doval, Fernando Cruz). But if those arms lock in and pitch to their potential — and if sketchy defense and baserunning donâ€t become this teamâ€s untimely undoing — the Yankees could find themselves back in the Fall Classic with a shot at redemption and a 28th World Series title.
5. Toronto Blue Jays (94-68)
Toronto fended off a late charge from the Yankees to secure its first AL East crown since 2015, a monumental achievement for a franchise that entered the season with a host of existential questions looming large. Signing Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to a long-term extension in April quieted some of the noise, but expectations for the season remained modest until the Blue Jays really started to click midsummer and began to look like legitimate contenders.
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Bo Bichetteâ€s ongoing absence due a sprained knee has dampened Torontoâ€s potential somewhat, but this is still a balanced offense capable of doing damage, with Guerrero and a resurgent George Springer leading a lineup that enters October with the highest batting average (.265) and fewest strikeouts of any club in the field. There is real talent on the mound as well, though Torontoâ€s pitching staff has been susceptible to some ugly showings and arrives in October with the highest team ERA (4.19) of any playoff club. That said, ace Kevin Gausman and trade-deadline addition Shane Bieber are capable of trading zeroes with any opposing starter, and closer Jeff Hoffman has looked much sharper in September.
Catch Toronto on the right day, and this team looks unstoppable. But without much recent October success to lean on — the Blue Jays have lost seven consecutive postseason games dating to the 2016 ALCS — they need to go out and prove they belong before planning any parades.
4. Seattle Mariners (90-72)
AL West champions for the first time since 2001, the Mariners earned a first-round bye and home-field advantage in the ALDS, which could prove to be a pivotal launching pad for a memorable postseason run. Seattleâ€s success over the past five seasons has largely been built on its stellar run prevention, and that manifests most obviously at pitcher-friendly T-Mobile Park in the Pacific Northwest. But what makes this yearâ€s Mariners club more formidable than recent iterations is its loaded lineup; no longer does this team need to scrape by, eking out close game after close game.
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Whether or not he wins AL MVP, catcher Cal Raleighâ€s historic campaign will be remembered in Seattle for generations, and now the switch-hitting superstar backstop has the opportunity to create even more memories with a standout October. And Raleigh is not alone in Seattleâ€s run-production efforts. Julio Rodriguez and Randy Arozarena combined for 59 homers and 61 stolen bases in the regular season. Eugenio Suarez and Josh Naylor, dual deadline additions from the D-backs, have bolstered the offense further, giving the Mariners more than enough firepower to support a pitching staff that also appears to be peaking at the right time.
Indeed, a rotation that was slowed by injuries early on has started to coalesce into a more familiar, reliable form. A bullpen initially led by known quantities Andres Muñoz and Matt Brash has been strengthened by breakouts from Gabe Speier and Eduard Bazardo. Skipper Dan Wilson is no stranger to the postseason, having reached the playoffs four times as a player with Seattle, but navigating the high-stakes scenarios of October baseball as a manager for the first time is no small task. How he handles the challenge remains to be seen, but the roster at his disposal has all the components of a legitimate championship contender.
3. Los Angeles Dodgers (92-69)
The Dodgers enter this postseason much healthier and far more imposing on paper than they did a year ago — but also without a first-round bye. That means Los Angeles is about to be subject to the wild-card round and the ominous randomness that comes with it for just the second time during its dynastic run dating to 2013. No matter how much better this team appears to be than its opponent in Cincinnati, shorter series offer less time for such discrepancies in talent to manifest. That said, there are still a ton of reasons to believe the Dodgers have an excellent chance of retaining their crown.
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First and foremost, Shohei Ohtani has resumed his role as a mind-blowing, singular, two-way presence, reestablishing his brilliance on the mound while continuing to pile up power numbers as L.A.â€s leadoff hitter. While Ohtaniâ€s return to the rotation comes with questions from a roster management and deployment standpoint, he undoubtedly strengthens a unit that is, believe it or not, fully healthy, with Yoshinobu Yamamoto continuing to thrive and Blake Snell ready to make his mark in his first October as a Dodger. The rotation will be relied on to counterbalance the Dodgers†most obvious weakness, which has been a troublingly shoddy bullpen, despite a bevy of highly accomplished arms.
However manager Dave Roberts chooses to deploy his pitchers en route to 27 outs, having a high-powered offense should afford him some breathing room as he makes those difficult decisions. While L.A.â€s modest win total — by its sky-high standards, anyway — is reflective of a team that didnâ€t always play up to its potential over the course of the regular season, it would be foolish to underestimate the Dodgers now that the postseason has arrived.
2. Milwaukee Brewers (97-65)
With a victory over Cincinnati in Game 162, the Brewers finished the regular season with 97 victories and the best record in baseball for just the second time in franchise history. The last time that happened was 1982, which was also the last and only time Milwaukee appeared in the World Series. A defeat in seven games against St. Louis that year means this franchise is still seeking its first championship. So here the Brewers are, in October for the seventh time in the past eight years, with a golden opportunity to do what no Brewers team has done before.
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Having home-field advantage for the entirety of the playoffs is surely a boon, but Milwaukee has also demonstrated comfort away from American Family Field, with baseballâ€s best road record at 45-36. And while the Brewers arenâ€t likely to overpower opponents, they are basically good-to-great at every other facet of the game on both sides of the ball. Their plate discipline is exquisite, they are efficient and aggressive on the basepaths, they play awesome defense, and they have a deep and diverse assortment of arms capable of racking up outs against quality opponents.
This might not be the most star-studded group, but itâ€s no accident that Pat Murphyâ€s ballclub emerged as the best regular-season team over a 162-game sample. Their strengths might not be as stupendously impressive as some other clubsâ€, but these Brewers have very few obvious weaknesses. Now itâ€s time for them to use that sample of success as a springboard for something much more meaningful in October.
1. Philadelphia Phillies (96-66)
Although they couldnâ€t chase down the Brewers for the top overall seed, the Phillies finished the season on a strong note, with an MLB-best 35-19 record since the start of August. Fueled by their early postseason exits the past two years following a trip to the World Series in 2022, this is a motivated and talented group laser-focused on doing whatever it takes to play their best when the lights are brightest.
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Philadelphia was perhaps the only team equipped to take a season-ending injury to a pitcher like Zack Wheeler in stride, as this is a pitching staff that still looks capable of handling the rigors of October with aplomb. From a newfound ace in Cristopher Sánchez to a venerable game-ender in Jhoan Duran to a surprise recent addition with quite the postseason résumé in Walker Buehler, manager Rob Thomson should have no shortage of options to cover the high-stakes innings to come.
Of course, itâ€s the veteran lineup that will need to flush the no-shows of recent Octobers and deliver in the biggest moments. Kyle Schwarber leveling up from impact hitter to world-class force of nature certainly inspires confidence on that front, and Bryce Harperâ€s personal postseason history is immaculate. Getting shortstop Trea Turner — who is having arguably the best all-around season of his career — back from the injured list just before October is another hugely positive development. And perhaps the new guys in the outfield in Harrison Bader and Max Kepler can provide the boost to push this team to new heights.
Everything is in place for Philadelphia to achieve the ultimate goal that has eluded it during this otherwise highly successful era. But as we know, nothing is certain in baseball. The Phillies enter this tournament as the team to beat by my humble estimation, but weâ€ve got quite the month ahead of us to find out who really has what it takes.
Let the games begin.
Reds clinch 2025 playoff berth
\n\n”,”providerName”:”Twitter”,”providerUrl”:” as the Mets were losing their grip with a surprising swoon of their own, the Reds won six of their next seven games and pulled into a tie with New York on Sept. 21. Then Cincinnati dropped two of three home games to the last-place Pirates to lose control of its own destiny.\n\nThen with Friday’s win over the Brewers, coupled with a Mets loss at Miami, the Reds got it back. But this time, they didn’t let it go.\n\n“It just speaks volumes to the team, just staying together, staying true,\” said pitcher Andrew Abbott, who started Saturday. \”We knew it wasnâ€t going to be easy. We knew we were going to have a long fight ahead of us. Itâ€s still not going to be easy moving forward. We know what we have to do. Weâ€ll try to handle our business the best we can.—,”type”:”text”}],”relativeSiteUrl”:”/news/reds-clinch-2025-playoff-berth”,”contentType”:”news”,”subHeadline”:null,”summary”:”MILWAUKEE — There have been times this season — and even this month — where the idea of the Reds making the playoffs seemed improbable, if not far-fetched. One way or another though, they figured out a way to get back in the race. 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