USA TODAY US Edition

Playoff rankings: Padres face a steep climb in NL

- Gabe Lacques

They’ve opened up the Major League Baseball playoffs to 12 teams, yet it may be harder than ever to navigate.

A handful of teams found themselves well-equipped to attack October after major trade-deadline acquisitio­ns. But their paths to glory may be blocked.

Did your team win baseball’s trade deadline, or at least try? If so, congrats. It also won’t mean much when the playoffs arrive and Commission­er Rob Manfred’s bracket shootout becomes reality.

With that, in the wake of Tuesday’s trade deadline, we take a look at the top eight clubs poised to win it all, a ranking based as much on path as it is talent:

1. Astros

You gotta get there to win it and nobody does that better than the Astros, who have reached five straight American League championsh­ip series and last year came two wins shy of a World Series title. This time, they’ll have ace Justin Verlander in tow, and it’s hard to argue anyone in the AL is throwing the ball better than the 39-year-old with a majors-best 1.81 ERA. They can stack the now playoff-hardened Framber Valdez, Luis Garcia and Jose Urquidy behind him – all after coasting to a division title and first-round bye.

2. Dodgers

They’re merely 22-5 since June 1 going

into Wednesday, administer­ing knockout blows to opposing pitchers before many fans have taken their seats. A fearsome 1-2-3 in any combo – pull Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman and Trea Turner’s names out of a hat and go from there – is backed up by suddenly fearsome cleanup hitter Will Smith, who has a .821 OPS and a .906 mark in his last 35 games. The pitching is something of an adventure but the tonnage of arms will clear a path to the World Series, one way or another.

3. Yankees

Not sold on Frankie Montas as the man to slay their longtime tormentors in Houston, but New York will coast to the AL East title and hold a significan­t advantage over their wild-card survivor. We’re left to trust they know something about Jordan Montgomery that we don’t, but his trade does make you wonder if they’re again too smart by half.

4. Blue Jays

Bold pick here, but it’s largely based on a 1-2 punch of Alek Manoah and Kevin Gausman that could make for a painless trip through the wild-card round, particular­ly if the Jays hold on for the right to host the best-of-three at Rogers Centre. A streaky team that will be volatile but fun in October.

5. Mets

Jacob de Grom is back, perhaps just in time for a natural ramp-up to join Max Scherzer as the problemati­c pitching duo Steve Cohen envisioned when he paid Scherzer $43.3 million to pair with de Grom. Stubbornly, the Mets haven’t yielded the NL East lead to Atlanta since April 12, in part because they are so well put together in every facet. Envisionin­g a long-awaited Queens star turn for shortstop Francisco Lindor.

6. Braves

They’re way low here, and feel free to bump them up to No. 3 if you believe they’ll win the NL East. At this point, we’re not going to doubt whether Austin

Riley can carry the offense through a hot summer and challengin­g autumn, but he will need help. Ronald Acuna Jr., whose extra-base hit percentage has dropped from 12% to 6%, would greatly aid the cause should he regain his MVPquality form.

7. Mariners

They made arguably the best tradedeadl­ine pickup – and paid a decent price for it – in adding Luis Castillo to front the rotation. But questions dog the club, most notably if rookies Logan Gilbert and Julio Rodriguez stay healthy and avoid hitting the figurative wall and whether high-priced lefty Robbie Ray will resemble the shutdown guy they paid for and not the inconsiste­nt one with a 4.11 ERA. Too many potholes to get through three series.

8. Padres

Juan Soto might be the greatest deadline pickup in history – or at least since the invention of MLB Trade Rumors. But the NL is a doggone snake pit and the Padres, trailing the Dodgers by 11 1⁄2 games, aren’t winning the division. Those hitters? They face a steep mountain with Scherzer and de Grom, Max Fried and Kyle Wright, Clayton Kershaw and the Dodgers machine all plotting against them. Those pitchers? Yu Darvish and Joe Musgrove are a nice combo, but running a table of Braves-MetsDodger­s, say, will expose the staff ’s overall depth.

 ?? THOMAS SHEA/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Astros’ Justin Verlander is in Cy Young form with an MLB-best 1.81 ERA.
THOMAS SHEA/USA TODAY SPORTS The Astros’ Justin Verlander is in Cy Young form with an MLB-best 1.81 ERA.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States