Stamford Advocate

The AL East, MLB’s best division, might be even stronger than you think

- By Neil Greenberg

The Tampa Bay Rays have dominated this baseball season from the opening weeks, when they became the fourth team in MLB history to start 13-0, joining the 1884 Maroons, 1982 Atlanta Braves and 1987 Milwaukee Brewers. The Rays have won a lot more since then, and are on pace for 120 wins, a total that would eclipse the 116-win record held jointly by the 2001 Seattle Mariners and 1906 Chicago Cubs.

Not only are the Rays winning, they’re dominating their opponents. As of Thursday morning, Tampa Bay had scored 122 more runs than they allowed, the highest run differenti­al in baseball and 35 runs better than the Texas Rangers, who ranked second. After finishing 25th out of 30 teams in home runs last season, the Rays have hit a leaguelead­ing 86 home runs. Only the 2000 St. Louis Cardinals and 1999 Seattle Mariners had more home runs during their first 43 games of the season. The Rays are on pace to easily break the single-season record of 307, set by the 2019 Minnesota Twins.

In almost any other year, that kind of performanc­e would be enough to run away with a division title, but this year’s American League East is far too strong for that. In fact, it seems poised to be one of the strongest divisions in recent memory.

The four other teams in the division — the Baltimore Orioles, Toronto Blue Jays, New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox — are all over .500, the only division able to pull off that feat this season. (As of Thursday morning, the AL West was the only other division with even three teams at or above .500.) The Orioles, who

trailed the Rays by 3 ½ games as of Thursday morning, would be leading every other division. But the raw win-loss records, impressive as they are, actually don’t do the division justice. It is even stronger than it looks on paper.

Since baseball realigned the divisions in 2013, moving the Houston Astros to the AL and giving each league 15 teams, the combined win rate for the 2023 AL East is the highest of any division at this approximat­e point of the season (a combined .620 after each team played 40 games). The division had a plus-207 run differenti­al at the teams’ collective 40game mark, almost double that of the 2020 NL West (plus-118), the next best division since 2013.

The NL Central had the second-highest collective run differenti­al (plus-18) at the 40-game mark this season, a mere fraction of what the AL East did to opponents. This year’s AL Central, by comparison, had a minus-165 run differenti­al after each of its members played 40 games, mostly due to the woeful performanc­e of the Oakland Athletics. The largest run differenti­al by a division since the latest realignmen­t was establishe­d in 2021 by the NL West, whose teams outscored opponents by 443 runs. The pace this year’s AL East is on, a projected run differenti­al of plus-838, would obliterate that mark.

Run differenti­al provides a great overall view of baseball’s best teams, but an even better way to judge the landscape at the team level for a single season requires looking at baseruns, a measure of how many runs a team should have scored or allowed given its underlying offensive and defensive performanc­e. The math behind baseruns can be daunting, yet because it removes the effects of sequencing — the order in which particular outcomes occur — from performanc­e, it gives us a better valuation at the team level.

Here’s a simple illustrati­on of how and why it works. A team draws four walks in a nine-inning game. If those four walks were issued consecutiv­ely in a single inning, it will create a run. But if those walks were spread out over four different innings, they might have no impact on the scoreboard.

We can take it a step further and use the expected statistics for each team to derive baseruns. These expected stats use underlying metrics like exit velocity and launch angle to determine the likelihood of a hit, further stripping away any good or bad luck a team might be experienci­ng from the inputs into the baseruns formula. For example, the Kansas City Royals are batting .234, but we would have expected an average of .249 based on balls in play, per data from TruMedia. So instead of 275 base hits, we can give Kansas City credit for 293 in the formula. Next, we can adjust each team’s performanc­e via baseruns for strength of schedule, also known as a simple ranking system, showing us how many runs per game above or below average each team should be scoring this season. Then it is a simple exercise to rank the teams to get the best and worst MLB has to offer in 2023. All ratings are as of Monday morning.

The top team in this expected baseruns formula adjusted for opponent, the Rays, should not surprise anyone. Their performanc­e fuels an estimate of 1.5 runs per game better than an average team. The Los Angeles Dodgers (+1.3) are second, followed by another AL East team, the Blue Jays (+1.0). The Red Sox (+0.7, seventh) and Yankees (+0.5, ninth) also rank in the top 10. (The Orioles are considered an average team by this metric and rank 16th.) Still, no other division has more than two squads among the Top 10, making the AL East clearly the strongest division in baseball.

But because of baseball’s playoff format, at least one of these teams will miss the postseason, and head-to-head attrition could take a further toll. Oddsmakers aren’t convinced the eventual World Series winner will emerge from the game’s strongest division. The odds for the World Series winner to come from the AL East are between +250 (wager $100 to win $250) and +300, depending on the sportsbook. The NL East is typically the second choice at around +290 odds, while one oddsmaker, Caesars, has the NL East as a slight favorite. Two teams in that division, the Atlanta Braves (+500 at FanDuel) and Los Angeles Dodgers (+500 at FanDuel), are also given shorter odds to win the World Series than the Rays (+650 at FanDuel).

Looked at another way, those odds imply the Braves have a 17 percent chance to win the World Series while the Dodgers have a 14 percent chance. The Rays, with a 13 percent chance, are tied with the Astros.

 ?? Frank Franklin II/Associated Press ?? The New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge bats during the third inning against the Oakland Athletics on May 9 in New York.
Frank Franklin II/Associated Press The New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge bats during the third inning against the Oakland Athletics on May 9 in New York.
 ?? Chris Szagola/Associated Press ?? The Boston Red Sox's Rafael Devers hits a single during the first inning against the Philadelph­ia Phillies on May 5 in Philadelph­ia.
Chris Szagola/Associated Press The Boston Red Sox's Rafael Devers hits a single during the first inning against the Philadelph­ia Phillies on May 5 in Philadelph­ia.

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