The MLB postseason begins Tuesday. Who should you root for to win a World Series?
October baseball is here a day early, with Major League Baseball’s first postseason games scheduled to begin Tuesday afternoon.
It’s a wide-open field this postseason with no clear favorites like last year’s Los Angeles Dodgers. No team in baseball this year won more than 97 games, making the 2025 Milwaukee Brewers the losing-est winningest team in baseball since 2013 (not counting the pandemic-shortened 2020 season).
That means it’s anybody’s World Series title to claim — including, potentially, one of three franchises that have never before won the Fall Classic. We’ve got the coasts: New York, Los Angeles, Seattle, San Diego, Boston, Philadelphia. And we’ve got the Midwest: Chicago, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Detroit. We’ve even got Canada! (Sorry, Southerners.)
Still, with 12 teams in the mix, it can be a lot to sort out which to root for. Let us help.
Do you like rooting for a team that has never been here before? (In other words, are you a human with a heart?)
Of the five teams that have never won a World Series, the Seattle Mariners are the only to have never even reached the Fall Classic. We’re talking about fans who have rooted for this team for 49 long seasons, watching as literally every other active franchise has taken a swing at a title. For a particularly bad 20-year stretch that ended in 2022, the M’s had the ignominious dishonor of owning the longest postseason drought of any of the big four North American men’s professional sports.
But the mood is suddenly sunny in Seattle, where catcher — and perhaps AL MVP — Cal Raleigh has had a historic year, becoming just the seventh player in baseball history to hit 60 home runs in a single season. Ownership bought big at the trade deadline and in September, the Mariners turned into the second-hottest team in baseball to claim an AL West division title for the first time since 2001.
The Mariners’ No. 2 seed means a ticket straight to the ALDS. They’ll face the winner of the Wild Card Series between the Detroit Tigers and Cleveland Guardians, both of which — despite their own long-running title droughts — have at least played in a World Series (and in the last 13 years to boot).

Seattle’s a no-go, but you otherwise dig that kind of underdog vibe?
Good news. Two other teams in the postseason have also never won the World Series. You can choose between the San Diego Padres, who haven’t been back to the World Series since they lost in 1998, or the Milwaukee Brewers, who haven’t returned since their last try 43 years ago in 1982. Fans of the Brewers and the Padres have suffered too!
Both teams have become playoff regulars in recent years but have yet to get over the hump. The Brewers emerged in July and August as baseball’s hottest team. At $121 million, they are in the lowest third of payrolls in baseball, dwarfed by big spenders and fellow National League contenders like the Los Angeles Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies. The Padres are bigger spenders, and that money has brought them some of the game’s biggest stars, including outfielder Fernando Tatis Jr. and third baseman Manny Machado — but they keep running into their rivals, the Dodgers, in the postseason. (That won’t happen this year unless both teams reach the NLCS.)
Okay, enough of the underdogs. How about a good, old-fashioned rivalry?
The New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox used to be the most toxic rivalry in baseball. (The Dodgers and Padres have taken that crown for now; last year’s poisonous NLDS will be tough to top.) But they have a chance to reclaim their crown when they meet for a best-of-three series in this year’s Wild Card round.

It doesn’t matter too much which team you choose. This is your chance to embrace the dark side. The Yankees are the Evil Empire, of course, but don’t discount Boston. The Curse of the Bambino is way, way back in the rearview mirror these days, and the Red Sox have won four World Series in the past 21 years, and while yes, we are only talking about baseball, it’s worth the reminder that seemingly every other Boston pro sports team has won at least one title since then too. (Honestly, this is making the Yankees seem long-suffering by comparison.)
The Yankees have a towering lineup, anchored by the otherworldly Aaron Judge who turned in yet another incredible season. His stats: .331 batting average, .457 on-base percentage, 1.144 OPS, plus 53 home runs — something he’s now doing with such regularity that it’s almost becoming boring. The Red Sox bring a spottier lineup but better pitching, especially in starter Garrett Crochet and closer Aroldis Chapman, who has posted the best ERA of his career in his [checks notes] age 37 season.
Do you love hitting for contact?
Only seven players finished the season with a batting average of .300 or higher — and the Toronto Blue Jays, the AL’s top seed, have two of them, shortstop Bo Bichette and designated hitter George Springer. Add in first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (.292) and catcher Alejandro Kirk (.282) and the Blue Jays boast four players hitting .280 or higher. The next-most is just two.
It’s not small ball, exactly, that the Blue Jays play. (Their 77 stolen bases this season was third-lowest in the majors, and most playoff teams hit more sacrifice flies than Toronto.) But the team led the league in batting average, hits and on-base percentage. They were second-to-last in strikeouts. Other teams hit more home runs and scored more runs, but the Blue Jays got men on base a ton. Now that’s baseball.
Do you just want to root for a winner?
The Philadelphia Phillies could be your team. This team is a powerhouse: slugger Kyle Schwarber (56 home runs), shortstop Trea Turner (.304 batting average), outfielder Harrison Bader (who has hit .305 since joining the Phillies in a trade), first baseman Bryce Harper and outfielder Nick Castellanos (75 and 72 RBIs, respectively). Even though they lost their ace starter Zack Wheeler to injury in August, this is still a great team that can crush anyone on any day.

The Los Angeles Dodgers, their 2024 World Series rings still fresh from the jeweler, are a good choice too. The Dodgers are dealing with some injuries, including to catcher Will Smith, but what team is 100% healthy? And this top of the order will never not be crazy: Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, all three of them MVPs.
Since he returned to the mound in July after elbow surgery, the two-way phenom Ohtani has posted a 2.87 ERA as a pitcher, the second-best of his career. Yet Ohtani had to use his limited appearances this year as a sort of rehab assignment, usually pitching just a few innings, and he only lasted a full six innings for the first time last week.
That prompted questions for some about how Ohtani might fit in a postseason strategy. On Monday, his teammate Betts dismissed those concerns.
“I think with him probably being the best player in the world, he can fit in wherever he wants to fit in,” Betts told reporters. “Whenever he feels like he needs to go in and pitch, I’m pretty positive nobody with a Dodgers uniform will say no.”
Or do you just want to watch some great young players?
Then tune in to it all. Don’t miss the Detroit Tigers ace Tarik Skubal, who is at the peak of his powers and looks destined to win the second Cy Young with his career-best 2.21 ERA. The Chicago Cubs are a likable bunch, with center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong, who’s due for a bounceback after cooling off from a hot start in the second half. And the Cincinnati Reds have one of the most electric players in the sport in shortstop Elly de la Cruz, who is making his playoff debut in a Wild Card series against the Dodgers. You can’t go wrong.
Transcript:
SCOTT DETROW, HOST:
October baseball begins in September this year with the first of Major League Baseball’s playoff games tomorrow. It took each and every day of the 162-game season for some teams to punch their ticket to the postseason and for others to miss out altogether. NPR sports correspondent Becky Sullivan is here to preview the playoffs. Hey, Becky.
BECKY SULLIVAN, BYLINE: Hey, Scott.
DETROW: So this is a fun field, and among other things, you have three teams in it that have never won the World Series.
SULLIVAN: Yeah. And in fact, one of them has never even appeared in the World Series. That’s the Seattle Mariners, who joined Major League Baseball back in the 1970s. And Scott, I was in Seattle just the other weekend, and let me tell you, that town is bumping with excitement for the Mariners…
DETROW: Yeah.
SULLIVAN: …People wearing M’s gear out (ph) everywhere. And in fact, I think, just the moment that catches it, you can hear the excitement of the crowd in this clip of the moment they clinched their spot in the playoffs. That was last week.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED SPORTSCASTER: One pitch away.
(CHEERING)
UNIDENTIFIED SPORTSCASTER: Ball game.
(CHEERING)
UNIDENTIFIED SPORTSCASTER: You can forget about next year. The Mariners are going to the playoffs.
SULLIVAN: And they’re this excited because this is a franchise that until pretty recently had the longest postseason drought in the major four of North American sports. Now they have this genuinely very good team on the shoulders, especially of the incredible season of catcher Cal Raleigh, who just the other day became one of only seven players in Major League history to hit 60 home runs in a single season. They’ve just been one of the hottest teams in baseball in September, which is exactly the kind of momentum that you want to have going into the postseason.
DETROW: Hall of fame nickname as well, but we can talk more about that later.
SULLIVAN: (Laughter).
DETROW: What about the two other teams that have never won the World Series?
SULLIVAN: Yeah, well, you have the Milwaukee Brewers. They lost the World Series back in 1982, haven’t returned. They have reached the playoffs more often than not in recent years, but they just have never been able to get over the hump. This is probably the best team they’ve had of late. You also have the San Diego Padres who last went to the World Series in 1998. And although they have won the World Series before, I’ll shout out the Toronto Blue Jays, the top seed in the American League. They have not been to the fall classic since they won it back in ’92 and ’93, back-to-back years. I think it would be an amazing achievement for any of these teams, and all of them have the talent capability of pulling it off. To me, it just feels like a very wide-open year in total.
DETROW: So what about the obstacles, though, in the way of these teams that have never won a series?
SULLIVAN: Yeah, I mean, I think the biggest challenge on the NL side is probably the Philadelphia Phillies. They won 96 games. That was the second most in baseball behind the Brewers. They have great lineup, tons of power. They’re also hot right now. You also, of course, have the two seasons – or the two teams, excuse me, that went to the World Series last season. That was the Los Angeles Dodgers and the New York Yankees. Certainly, LA was the early favorite this year to repeat as champions. Both of them, I would say, underwhelmed over the course of the whole season, but they are still super talented, won a lot of games and definitely have a good shot in any series they have.
DETROW: That’s the teams going to the playoffs. Now we have to talk about the New York Mets.
SULLIVAN: (Laughter) Yes. They are boldly refuting the age-old theory that money can buy you a World Series, Scott. They had the second highest payroll in baseball this year. And for the first couple of months of the season, I’ll say, it looks like it was working, but then they hit a skid. They just kept sliding. And even at the very end, yesterday, all they needed was one measly little win against the Miami Marlins to punch their ticket. But even with everything on the line, they couldn’t manage a win or even a single run. The vibes were terrible afterward in the locker room. I wasn’t there, but I watched all these postgame interviews, and the players are all just, like, despondent, these thousand-yard stares. Here’s Pete Alonso. He’s their first baseman who admitted it was never on anyone’s – it was never in anyone’s mind on the team that they would end up missing the playoffs.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
PETE ALONSO: It’s kind of beyond frustration. I think it’s just straight up disappointing. And there’s no other way to sugarcoat it and – super talented team. And the reality is, we fell short. I mean, we didn’t even get talked over. We fell short.
DETROW: In the brief time we have left – this could fill out a whole show – but, you know, the Mets have had their share of crashes over the years. What specifically happened in 2025?
SULLIVAN: Yeah, I think even people involved in the organization can’t figure out exactly how to explain it. The roster was great. They did have some injuries to their starting pitchers. That was a setback. But it’s honestly hard to describe the scale of the underperformance. You had team owner Steve Cohen today tweet out an apology to fans and a promise to figure out what went wrong. He said, quote, “we are all feeling raw emotions today. I know how much time and effort you have put into this team. The result was unacceptable.” But boy, what a tough pill to swallow – pay 340 million bucks just to sit at home and watch as the Yankees and the Phillies get to dance – oof (ph).
DETROW: Doesn’t get what it used to, $340 million. That’s NPR’s Becky Sullivan. Thanks so much.
SULLIVAN: You’re welcome.
(SOUNDBITE OF JACK NORWORTH AND ALBERT VON TILZER SONG, “TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALL GAME”)
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