Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Sports

MLB power rankings: Huge leap for NL West team challenging Dodgers

Perhaps the San Francisco Giants’ back to the future approach really is paying off.

A new regime led by franchise legend Buster Posey intent on returning the club to its strong pitching, solid defense, timely hitting and esprit de corps of their three-championship run one decade ago is seeing immediate results this season. The Giants have won their first three series, capped by a sweep of the Seattle Mariners in their first set at Oracle Park this season, and leaped 11 spots in USA TODAY Sports’ power rankings.

At 8-1, the Giants are in a virtual tie with the – gulp – Los Angeles Dodgers atop the National League West, part of a divisional wrecking ball that’s seen West teams other than the Colorado Rockies race out to a 29-10 record. Willy Adames, whose $182 million contract broke Posey’s record as the largest in franchise history, won their home opener with a two-run walk-off single; Wilmer Flores walked the Mariners off in extra innings again on Sunday. And the club ranks atop the majors in fielding percentage and are fourth in ERA.

A familiar look in China Basin.

A look at our updated rankings:

1. Los Angeles Dodgers (-)

Blake Snell’s barking shoulder lands him on IL, leaving club with – hmm – roughly eight rotation options.

2. Philadelphia Phillies (+1)

Marquee bullpen acquisition Jordan Romano struggling (2.50 WHIP, 15.75 ERA) in first five appearances.

3. New York Yankees (-1)

Will Warren with a pair of rough starts at back of rotation.

4. San Diego Padres (-)

Despite hitting just eight home runs, they’re averaging nearly five runs a game.

5. Texas Rangers (+1)

Kumar Rocker joins Jack Leiter in the ‘completed five innings’ club.

6. New York Mets (+2)

Pete Alonso starting red-hot – three homers, 11 RBI, and ninth-inning heroics are back.

7. Arizona Diamondbacks (-)

Corbin Burnes’ cutter not as sharp, hard in first two starts.

8. San Francisco Giants (+11)

Jordan Hicks with 11 strikeouts, three walks in his first two starts.

9. Detroit Tigers (+1)

Tarik Skubal struggling early, but they still know how to punish White Sox.

10. Baltimore Orioles (-5)

Have scored two or fewer runs in five of 10 games.

11. Boston Red Sox (-)

Starters not named Garrett Crochet have a 6.42 ERA.

12. Chicago Cubs (+2)

Their new center fielder has Tucked away a few more million in his .319/.458/.745 start.

13. Kansas City Royals (+4)

They seem to have Baltimore’s number.

14. Toronto Blue Jays (+7)

We’ll see what a Vlad Guerrero Jr. extension does to kickstart this squad.

15. Houston Astros (-6)

Catcher Yainer Diaz off to a 2-for-26 (.077) start.

16. Tampa Bay Rays (+2)

Brandon Lowe, with three homers and an .898 OPS, digging Steinbrenner Field.

17. Atlanta Braves (-5)

Catcher Sean Murphy is back, but promising rookie Drake Baldwin sticks on big league roster.

18. Seattle Mariners (-3)

Offensive stat of the weak: DH Rowdy Tellez is 1-for-15 with five strikeouts and one walk.

19. Minnesota Twins (+4)

OK, so they’re not that horrible.

20. Los Angeles Angels (+5)

Only Aaron Judge has hit more home runs than Logan O’Hoppe.

21. St. Louis Cardinals (-1)

Catcher Ivan Herrera crushes four homers – and then irritates knee.

22. Milwaukee Brewers (+2)

A young man by the name of Chad Patrick collects his first major league win.

23. Cleveland Guardians (-7)

A rough 1-5 West Coast swing, but White Sox+home opener should be an elixir.

24. Cincinnati Reds (-11)

Losing series at Milwaukee kinda dampens the ‘this year will be different’ vibes.

25. Washington Nationals (-3)

Mitchell Parker sporting a 0.73 ERA after two starts.

26. Miami Marlins (+1)

A multi-homer game for former Cub prospect Matt Mervis.

27. Pittsburgh Pirates (+1)

David Bednar shipped to minor leagues, but ninth inning still an adventure.

28. Athletics (-2)

Ball already flying in Yolo County as club gives up 35 runs in first three home games.

29. Colorado Rockies (-)

Chase Dollander wins major league debut – surviving Coors Field, no less.

30. Chicago White Sox (-)

Michael Tauchman returns, but Andrew Benintendi now slowed by injury.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

    You May Also Like

    Stocks

    In this exclusive StockCharts video, Joe Rabil shows you how to use the ADX on monthly and weekly charts to find stocks with massive...

    Business

    Tesla reported 336,000 vehicle deliveries in the first quarter of 2025, a 13% decline from a year ago, two days after the electric vehicle company’s...

    Business

    United Airlines plans to add daily flights to Vietnam and Thailand in October, further expanding the network for the U.S. carrier that already has the...

    Business

    Retailers and brands have turned to Vietnam to manufacture goods from sneakers to couches while moving some or all production out of China. For...

    Disclaimer: VolatilityIndicators.com, its managers, its employees, and assigns (collectively “The Company”) do not make any guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above. Information provided by this website is for research purposes only and should not be considered as personalized financial advice. The Company is not affiliated with, nor does it receive compensation from, any specific security. The Company is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give investing advice or provide investment recommendation. Any investments recommended here should be taken into consideration only after consulting with your investment advisor and after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.

    Copyright © 2025 VolatilityIndicators.com | All Rights Reserved