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MARINERS CLINCH POSTSEASON BERTH FOR FIRST TIME SINCE 2001, SNAPPING LONGEST MLB
PLAYOFF DROUGHT


THE MARINERS HAVE MADE THE PLAYOFFS FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE THEIR
RECORD-SETTING 2001 TEAM

By Matt Snyder
 & R.J. Anderson
Oct 1, 2022 at 12:39 am ET • 2 min read
 * 
 * 
 * 

Getty Images

For the first time since 2001, the Seattle Mariners are a playoff team. They
punched their ticket to the 2022 MLB playoffs with a 2-1 walk-off victory over
the Oakland A's Friday night. Catcher Cal Raleigh delivered the game-winning
home run in the ninth, breaking a 1-1 tie. Take a look:

> Cal Raleigh just sent the Mariners to the playoffs for the first time in 21
> years pic.twitter.com/cXaaU6bePR
> 
> — Casey Drottar (@CDrottar19) October 1, 2022

This snaps the longest playoff drought in men's North American professional
sports. The NBA's Sacramento Kings take over the mantle, as they haven't made
the playoffs since 2006. As for MLB, the Phillies (2011) have grabbed the lead,
though perhaps that is temporary. They have a half-game lead for the final NL
playoff spot. Should they make the playoffs, the dubious distinction of longest
playoff drought moves to the Angels (2014). 

Much of the focus is on the drought and will continue to be, but let's also
credit the team that broke it. 

Wunderkind center fielder Julio Rodríguez was an All-Star in his age-21 season
and will win AL Rookie of the Year in addition to getting some down-ballot MVP
love. He's hitting .280 with a 144 OPS+, 27 homers, 25 stolen bases and 5.7 WAR
in 129 games. Those are superstar numbers already. He's currently injured but
will very likely return before the playoffs. 



Joining him on an inconsistent offense capable of home run barrages are Eugenio
Suárez (31 homers), Cal Raleigh (26) and Carlos Santana (15 homers in just 73
games). Ty France had a huge start to the season and we know what players like
Jesse Winker and Mitch Haniger can do when they are going well. The offense can
look helpless for stretches, but if they get everyone going in the playoffs, a
run is possible with the pitching they have. 

Speaking of, Luis Castillo and Robbie Ray give the Mariners two established,
frontline starters for a playoff rotation in front of youngsters Logan
Gilbert -- who threw very well Friday in the clincher -- and George Kirby. In
the bullpen, Seattle has had a strong core of late-inning relievers much of the
season, getting great work from the likes of Paul Sewald, Penn Murfee, Andrés
Muñoz and Erik Swanson. 

The drought will obviously get the headlines as it has been a relatively long
time. That 2001 Mariners team won a record-tying 116 games. It had Edgar
Martinez, Mike Cameron and John Olerud. Jamie Moyer was in the rotation and he
was still under 40! Bret Boone had a monster season with 37 homers and 141 RBI.
The Mariners had the AL MVP, too, and it was Ichiro Suzuki. He might be the best
way to place this in our consciousness in terms of how long ago it was, because
Ichiro was a rookie that year. 



In the years since, there have been some awful seasons (101 losses in 2008 and
2010) and some tease jobs (2018 stands out). They won 90 games last year and
were still left out in the cold. 

What stands out most this season, on the team level, would be the 14-game
winning streak heading into the All-Star break. It included series sweeps over
the Blue Jays and Padres, showing that this team is capable of making a deep run
in the playoffs if everything breaks right at the right time. 

For now, just making the playoffs is a huge accomplishment and worth
celebration. After all, they haven't been able to celebrate it in over two
decades. 










MLB POWER RANKINGS: BRAVES, YANKEES FINISH SEASON STRONG -- WHAT DOES IT MEAN
FOR WORLD SERIES HOPES?


DOES MOMENTUM REALLY MATTER HEADING TOWARD THE PLAYOFFS?

By Matt Snyder
4 hrs ago • 5 min read
 * 
 * 
 * 

Watch Now:

The 2022 Major League Baseball season has three days left. We've seen an
incredible regular season and it's entirely possible the best is yet to come
(can it be way better, please, Baseball Gods?). 

In looking ahead to the playoffs, one argument I've worked tirelessly to dispel
over the years has been this notion that it matters how a team is playing late
in the season. Historically speaking, there hasn't really been a correlation
between finishing hot and winning the World Series, nor is there one between
being able to rest all your players and going deep into the postseason.
Generally, the arguments come after the results. If a team loses in the first
round, well, it was because of how they finished the regular season, whether it
was hot, cold, playing to the final day or having clinched for weeks. 

In an effort to get in front of it, let's start working backward with the World
Series champions and how they finished. 

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2021 Braves (No. 3 seed NL, 12th-best record in MLB) -- Here's your latest Hot
Hand Theory poster child. The Braves had the worst record among playoff teams,
but they had won 12 of their last 14 to finish 36-18 after Aug. 1. They never
even faced elimination in the playoffs. 



2020 Dodgers (best record in MLB) -- It's tougher to get a read with the short
regular-season, no fans in ballparks and the biggest playoff field ever. They
did win 10 of their final 12 before winning five straight heading to the NLCS.
They had to overcome 2-0 and 3-1 deficits in the NLCS, though. 

2019 Nationals (No. 4 seed NL, tied for eighth-best record in MLB) -- 19-31,
right? I still remembered it without having to look it up. That was the
Nationals' record at one point. They were one of the best teams after that. They
won 10 of their last 11 in the regular season, but then nearly lost in the Wild
Card Game. It took a furious eighth-inning rally and a misplay.  

2018 Red Sox (best record in MLB) -- They were in first place basically the
entire season en route to a 108-win season. They clinched the AL East with nine
games left in the season. They lost five of their last eight games including
three of four to the Yankees to end the season. Clinched early? Check. Rough
finish? Check. They took three of four from those same Yankees in the ALDS
before going 8-2 in the ALCS and World Series, never coming close to an
elimination game. 



2017 Astros (No. 2 seed AL, third-best record in MLB) -- As I tried to point
out, you can find examples of pretty much any scenario. We've seen the Hot Hand
teams who had lesser regular-season resumes. The Red Sox were the powerhouse
team that finished poorly and clinched early. These Astros are a powerhouse with
an early clinch (Sept. 17) that still finished hot, winning 14 of their final
17. They were still given all they could handle in both the ALCS and World
Series. 

2016 Cubs (best record in MLB) - Another powerhouse with an early clinch (Sept.
16), the Cubs had a good finish at 9-5-1 (the tie was just wiped off the books
instead of being resumed, which is why the Cubs only have 161 official game).
They fell behind 2-1 in the NLCS and 3-1 in the World Series. They won it all.
The best ball they played all year was to start the season, too. 

2015 Royals (No. 1 seed AL, fourth-best record in MLB) -- This one depends on
how you want to look at what is "hot." The Royals won their last five games. If
you went back a bit, though, they were just 13-16 after Sept. 3. I suppose the
people who wanted to argue that playing well at the end matters would say the
Royals rescued themselves from certain demise, as they had lost 16 of 24 before
the winning streak. Of course, they were then just a few outs from being
eliminated in the ALDS, as they fell behind two games to one and trailed heading
into the eighth inning of Game 4, so did the "hot" really carry over? 



2014 Giants (No. 5 seed NL, tied for eighth-best record in MLB) -- These Giants
were only 13-12 in September. The won only six of their final 15 games. They
were a wild card that won only 88 games in the regular season. The Giants didn't
finish strong and they weren't a powerhouse. They were the World Series
champions. 

2013 Red Sox (No. 1 seed AL, tied for best record in MLB) -- Another early
clinch (Sept. 20) and this time the team finished relatively cold after it. They
lost four of their last seven, including their final two games, and went 5-6 in
their last 11. They didn't face elimination in the playoffs, though things
started to look at little dicey in the ALCS (the home run cop!) and World Series
(remember the in-dugout speech?). 

2012 Giants (No. 3 seed NL, tied for fourth-best record in MLB) -- There were
still 10 games left after they clinched the division and the Giants went 5-5 in
those games. They had won 10 of 11 through the West-clinching win, if that feels
relevant. They lost the first two games of the NLDS before winning three
straight on the road (remember the Buster Posey grand slam in Cincy?) and came
back from a 3-1 deficit in the NLCS before sweeping the heavily-favored Tigers
in the World Series. 



This should be enough. It's the last 10 champions and we've got wild cards,
start-to-finish powerhouses, teams finishing on fire and others sputtering. If I
were writing a book, we could go back through every single World Series champion
and we'd continue to see variety. I like stopping at the Giants, though, because
working through that paragraph should be a perfect illustration of how you can't
predict what will happen moving forward based upon the very-recent body of
work. 

There isn't a formula aside from being a good baseball team and playing well
once the playoffs hit. Ignore any noise that you hear about "finishing strong"
or "resting players" or "rhythm" or "routine" or anything at all when you look
ahead to predict how the playoffs will unfold. It just really doesn't matter. 

Plus, generally speaking, the more playoff teams there are, the crazier things
can get. 



And there are more playoff teams than every season other than 2020 here in less
than a week. We need to brace ourselves for a wild October that bleeds into
November. Bring it on, Baseball Gods. 

Biggest Movers
3 Mariners
2 Mets
Rk
Teams
 
Chg
Rcrd
1

Dodgers This franchise has been around 139 seasons, making 35 postseason
appearances. It has won 25 pennants and seven World Series. It had never before
been 60 games over .500. This group just keeps raising the bar. -- 110-49 2

Astros The last time a qualifying pitcher 39 or older posted a sub-2.00 ERA was
Roger Clemens (1.87 in 2005) and before that you have to go all the way back to
Bill Byrd in 1948 (1.68). Justin Verlander's at 1.80 right now. -- 104-55 3

Yankees The struggles are safely in the rearview at this point. The Yankees have
gone 18-7 since Sept. 3. Keep in mind how much tougher the entire AL East is
than the NL East, hence the promotion here. 2 98-61 4

Braves This team is better than last year, possibly by a pretty decent margin,
but they're about to find out how hard it is to repeat. If they pull it off,
they'll be the first repeat champ since the 1998-2000 Yankees. -- 100-60 5

Mets The success or failure of this season is determined in the playoffs, not
the regular season. Right? RIGHT? 2 98-61 6

Blue Jays Since the beginning of September, Bo Bichette has played in 30 games.
He's had multiple hits 18 times. -- 90-69 7

Cardinals The Cardinals have the most NL MVPs with 17. Will they be adding an
18th this year? -- 92-68 8

Guardians Piggybacking on the intro topic above, the Hot Hand Theory didn't work
out too well with this club in 2017. They went 33-4 to close the season and then
were bounced in the ALDS. Can they exorcise some demons this time around? They
are hot again! -- 90-70 9

Mariners That Cal Raleigh walk-off home run to clinch a drought-breaking playoff
berth was easily one of the most satisfying plays of the season. 3 87-71 10

Padres Sure, 2020 counts, but this team is playoff bound for the first time in a
"normal" season since 2006. It wasn't the Mariners, but it still felt like a
significant drought ended, you know? 1 87-72 11

Rays Here's a weird one, given who they've been for so long: The Rays lead the
majors with 33 blown saves. I know it isn't the most telling stat or anything,
but it was jarring to see. 1 86-74 12

Phillies They have tried their best to give this thing away, but it seems like
Saturday night with the blowout win and Brewers' blown save turned the tide. 1
86-73 13

Brewers The playoff spot was right there for the taking, but the Brewers lost
five of seven, including three of four to the Marlins. That's just not gonna get
it done. -- 84-75 14

Orioles The Orioles are the first team since the 1899 St. Louis Perfectos (not
kidding!) to go .500 or better the season after losing at least 110 games. --
82-77 15

Giants No team has ever won at least 107 games in a season and then had a
full-season losing record the next year. The closest anyone ever came? The 2019
Red Sox, who went 84-78 the year after winning 108. The Giants are desperately
trying to avoid this dubious distinction, though, as they've won 11 of their
last 13. -- 80-79 16

Red Sox The degree to which they were owned by the Blue Jays this season was
downright embarrassing (3-16 with a negative-70 run differential). -- 76-84 17

Angels Through 2020, I thought it was just never going to happen with Shohei
Ohtani trying to be a full-time hitter and full-fledged member of a rotation. I
wasn't alone. A lot of people thought he'd have to pick one (likely as a right
fielder). He's now through two full seasons of doing it full-on two way.
Amazing. 3 73-86 18

Cubs The Cubs are 38-29 since the All-Star break. Also, they went 21-10 against
the NL East this season, including 6-0 against the Phillies. 3 73-87 19

White Sox It seems like a decent-sized shakeup is in order. Surely they'll
retain Jose Abreu, though, right? He's 35 and heading toward free agency, but it
won't feel right to ever see him in another uniform. 2 79-80 20

Twins Remember, they finished last in 2021. Yes, behind the Tigers and Royals.
This was actually a step forward, but the marathon of 162 can play games with
our minds. The sequencing of their wins and losses this year just made it such a
gut punch. And now they likely won't be able to retain Carlos Correa. 2 77-82 21

Diamondbacks It feels like a regular occurrence this year when I hype up a young
Diamondbacks player, so let's add Drey Jameson to the fray. The 34th overall
pick in 2019 out of Ball State, Jameson is 3-0 with a 1.48 ERA and 24 strikeouts
in 24 1/3 innings through his first four career starts. Keep an eye on these
guys through the offseason and into the spring. 2 73-86 22

Marlins There has never been a Marlins Cy Young winner. That'll change in the
middle of November this year. 2 68-92 23

Tigers For some reason, the Tigers are finishing strong. They've won 10 of 12
and I don't get it. Wait, no, I've got it! Due to the draft lottery, there isn't
as much incentive to finish with the worst record, so the Tigers are actually
playing hard. What a brilliant plan it was to implement this new system! 2 65-93
24

Rangers Remember when the Rangers got good for a quick second? For real! They
went 17-10 in May and were exactly .500 when the month closed. It was a long
time ago. 2 66-93 25

Rockies They have pulled it off again. The Rockies ended this season with a
winning home record (41-40). That means, yes, they are the worst road team again
(they are tied with the Royals right now at 25-53). It's uncanny how different
they are, year in and year out, with this split. Good ol' Coors. 2 66-93 26

Royals The new administration has a tough task, for sure, but building around
Bobby Witt on the position side and Brady Singer on the pitching end provides
for a nice starting point. -- 65-95 27

Pirates They had a chance to finish last here in The Official Power Rankings,
but then swept the Reds, winning the season series 12-7. 3 61-99 28

Reds We all should've known what a debacle this would be when the owner's son
made a fool of himself and essentially taunted the fans before Opening Day. 1
61-99 29

Nationals Remember the initial Juan Soto/Josh Bell trade reportedly included
Eric Hosmer, but then he exercised his no-trade clause and the Padres had to
pivot. They ended up sending Luke Voit to the Nats in the deal. I wonder how
Voit has felt about this ever since? I mean, he's still an MLB player and that's
pretty awesome. He's making a ton of money in doing so, too, but deep down,
there has to be animosity, right? I don't know, I was just thinking about it in
glancing at the Nationals roster and realizing I had to put something next to
their name here. It is food for thought, though, for sure! -- 55-104 30

Athletics I noticed the A's had three players in double digits in stolen bases
and held out hope it would make for an interesting comment. Instead, 17 teams
have three players with at least 10 steals. Three teams have five! It isn't even
interesting in the first place, either. Let this be an illustration just how
desperate I have been for weekly 2022 A's comments. I'm finally done with them.
Good riddance. 2 57-102


















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