MLB

With MLB playoffs near, Judge vs. Ohtani an enticing World Series possibility

While the rooting interests of baseball fans vary widely, there's little doubt MLB and television executives are drooling over the potential playoff matchup between Aaron Judge of the Yankees and the Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani, two of the top sluggers of this generation.

Mariners, Mets, D-backs, Braves fighting for wild-card berths in season's final week

Composite photo of major league sluggers Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees and Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
A playoff matchup of major league sluggers Aaron Judge, left, and Shohei Ohtani, right, looms as an enticing October possibility. They have combined to hit 106 home runs this season. (CBC Sports composite: Luke Hales, Megan Briggs/Getty Images)

The Major League Baseball playoffs are approaching and a Shohei Ohtani vs. Aaron Judge matchup in the World Series looms as an enticing October possibility.

While the rooting interests of baseball fans vary widely, there's little doubt MLB and television executives are drooling over the potential matchup between two of the top sluggers of this generation. Ohtani recently became the first player to have 50 homers and 50 stolen bases in one season while Judge is up to 56 homers.

On top of that, Ohtani (Los Angeles Dodgers) and Judge (New York Yankees) play in the nation's top two media markets for two of the sport's most storied franchises.

Of course, there will be 10 other teams trying to block those teams from the Fall Classic. Last season, the Texas Rangers beat the Arizona Diamondbacks four games to one for their first title in franchise history.

Here's a look at what's coming:

Who's in the playoffs? Who's still fighting?

In the American League, Cleveland Guardians, Houston Astros, Baltimore Orioles and Yankees have clinched four of the six playoff spots. The Kansas City Royals and Detroit Tigers are in the best position to claim the final two AL wild cards, but the Seattle Mariners and Minnesota Twins are among the teams in pursuit.

In the National League, the Philadelphia Phillies, Milwaukee Brewers, San Diego Padres and Dodgers have claimed four of the six spots. The New York Mets, Arizona Diamondbacks and Atlanta Braves are fighting for the last two wild cards.

How does the wild-card round work?

The best-of-three wild card format is in its third season. The format was changed in 2022 from the sudden death one-game format that was in place since 2012 with the exception of the COVID-19 pandemic-affected 2020 season.

Six teams each from the American League and National League will qualify for the post-season, including the three division winners in each league. The three wild-card teams in each league will be the teams with the best record that didn't win their division.

The top two division winners with the best records in each league will get a bye and don't have to play in the wild-card round. Those four teams get a few days of rest. Right now, that would be the Yankees and Guardians in the American League and the Phillies and Dodgers in the National League.

The wild-card round will feature four series: The No. 6 seed will play at the No. 3 seed in both the AL and NL. The No. 5 seed will play at the No. 4 seed.

One big advantage for the higher seed in those wild-card series is they get to host all three games.

What about ties in the standings?

If there's a tie for one of the playoff spots after the 162-game regular season, mathematical tiebreakers will be used instead of an extra game. The first will be the head-to-head record between the two teams involved.

If that can't handle the stalemate, the team with the best intra-division record will win the tiebreaker. If that doesn't work, the process continues with more and more convoluted solutions until a resolution is reached.

There's a chance both leagues come to a tiebreaker scenario. The Diamondbacks, Mets and Braves are locked in a tight race for two NL wild-card spots, while the Tigers, Twins, Royals and Mariners also are fighting for two wild-card spots.

Rule changes

Many of baseball's recent rule changes are still in effect during the post-season, including the pitch clock, a ban on extreme infield shifts and a limit to how many times a pitcher can disengage from the rubber. The pitch clock has been a huge change for the sport and widely celebrated, cutting game times by about 30 minutes.

There is one rule that won't make the postseason cut: the so-called "ghost runner" in extra innings.

During the MLB regular season, if a game goes to extra innings, a runner is placed at second base to start the 10th inning when each team bats. That won't happen in the postseason. Extra innings will be played just like the previous nine.

Betting favourites

The Dodgers are the current betting favourites to win the World Series at +325, followed by the Yankees (+450) and Phillies (+450), according to BetMGM Sportsbook.

How to watch

The wild-card rounds will be broadcast on ESPN, ESPN2 and ABC. The later rounds will be split between FS1, TruTV, TBS and Fox.

Playoff schedule

  • Wild-card series: Oct. 1-3
  • Division series: Oct. 5-12
  • League Championship series: Oct. 13-22
  • World Series: Oct. 25-Nov. 2

Yankees lose lefty Cortes to ailing elbow

Yankees pitcher Nestor Cortes has a strained flexor in his pitching elbow and was put on the 15-day injured list Wednesday in a blow to New York's rotation heading into the playoffs.

Cortes and the Yankees are still holding out some hope he could return at some point in the post-season, but it didn't sound likely.

"I don't know if optimistic. I mean, we're not ruling it out yet," manager Aaron Boone said.

The left-hander was scratched from his scheduled start against Baltimore on Wednesday night and replaced by Marcus Stroman. The IL move was retroactive to Sunday.

Cortes (9-10, 3.77 earned-run average) was a candidate to be the Yankees' third starter in the post-season behind Gerrit Cole (7-5, 3.67) and Carlos Rodon (16-9, 3.98). Cortes was 4-0 with a 1.58 ERA in his last seven starts, striking out 38 and walking 10 in 40 innings.

Already assured of a playoff berth, New York needed one victory in its last five games to clinch the AL East and a first-round bye. The Yankees would open the best-of-five Division Series at home on Oct. 5.

Stroman, rookie Luis Gil and Clarke Schmidt are the remaining candidates to start Game 3. Because there are off days between Games 1 and 2 in addition to between Games 2 and 3, a team likely will need only three starters.

New York recalled right-hander Cody Poteet from triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, and he was available in the bullpen Wednesday night.

New York Yankees starting pitcher Nestor Cortes delivers a pitch in the first inning against the St. Louis Cardinals at Yankee Stadium on Sept. 1, 2024 in the Bronx, New York.
Left-handed starter Nestor Cortes was a candidate to be the Yankees' third starter in the post-season behind Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodon. (Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

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