2025 MLB Playoff Predictions: Where Teams Project to Finish at the Memorial Day Marker ...Middle East

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Will your team be playing in October? We’re revisiting our TRACR-powered projection model to see what its MLB playoff predictions look like after passing Memorial Day.

There’s an old adage that you can’t make any big-picture determinations about a Major League Baseball season until the calendar hits Memorial Day.

So here we are.

And what kind of proclamations can we make at the first marker of the 2025 MLB season? That the Beer Makers are no longer the kings of the NL Central? Or the Colorado Rockies are actually worse that the historically bad 2024 Chicago White Sox?

Can we finally say that the Detroit Tigers are for real? Or that the Baltimore Orioles are experiencing a fall from grace like we haven’t seen in quite some time?

By the unwritten rules of the baseball calendar, we can say all of it. But we’ll also explain further as we go through how our projection model sees the division races playing out the rest of the way.

Our projection model incorporates each team’s TRACR, win-loss record and strength of schedule to calculate an expected run differential per 27 outs, which is used to simulate the remaining schedule and produce our predictions.

NL Central

Will the Milwaukee Brewers (27-28) finish in fourth place? Can’t be, right?

But after losing Corbin Burnes, Willy Adames, Devin Williams and Brandon Woodruff over the past couple of seasons, the Brew Crew appears to have finally taken a step back.

Milwaukee has suffered the fifth-largest drop in projected TRACR prior to the season (12th; 0.50) to TRACR heading into May 27 (22nd; minus-0.29). Again, TRACR uses advanced metrics and other factors to calculate how many runs per nine innings better or worse teams are compared to the league-average club.

It certainly hasn’t helped Milwaukee that the two teams that have made the largest leaps so far compared to our preseason projections are also in the NL Central (see below).

The Chicago Cubs (33-21), who have gone from 14th in TRACR to second, and the surprising St. Louis Cardinals (30-24), who have soared from 20th to fourth.

The Cubs have an MLB-high five players with nine home runs or more and rank first in offensive TRACR (O-TRACR). The Cards, who are seventh in MLB in defensive TRACR (run prevention, so pitching and defense), have won 16 of their last 21.

The Cincinnati Reds (27-28) have blown two games after leading by at least five runs – tied for most in MLB with the Atlanta Braves. The Pittsburgh Pirates (19-36) have played 22 one-run games this season – also tied with Atlanta for the most in MLB.

NL East

It’s somewhat remarkable that the New York Mets (33-21) have gotten off to the kind of start they have without much contribution from Juan Soto.

The superstar offseason addition has the second-lowest batting average of his career through 53 games of a season.

Juan Soto: Highest Batting Avg. in First 53 Player Games

.315 – 2024 w/NYY .311 – 2018 w/WAS .289 – 2019 w/WAS .267 – 2021 w/WAS .261 – 2023 w/SD .233 – 2025 w/NYM .228 – 2022 w/WAS

The Philadelphia Phillies (34-19) have gone a major league-best 21-6 since April 26, but our model still likes the Mets to hold them off in the East.

Trea Turner has played a key role in the Phillies’ surge, totaling six extra-base hits, eight RBIs and four stolen bases over his last seven games. He became the first Phillies player to reach those marks in a seven-game span since Jimmy Rollins in September 2007.

Our model has the Atlanta Braves (25-27) with about 81 projected wins behind the surging Phillies and Mets, but it’s fair to speculate that it could rise with 2023 NL MVP Ronald Acuna Jr. back and already making an impact, and ace Spencer Strider working his way back into form.

Acuna has two homers, a double and a walk in his three games this season. The last Braves right fielder to do that in his first three games of a season was David Justice in 1995.

James Wood has been a bright spot for the Washington Nationals (24-29) and Kyle Stowers has been one for the Miami Marlins (21-31). Wood is one of four players in the NL with at least 30 runs scored, 30 RBIs, 30 walks and 25 extra-base hits, joining Pete Alonso, Shohei Ohtani and Kyle Tucker.

Stowers is one of three players this season to hit at least .300 with 10 home runs and 30 RBIs (Aaron Judge, Teoscar Hernandez). The last Marlin to do that through the first 50 games of a season was Marcell Ozuna in 2017.

NL West

Remember all the spring training talk about how the Los Angeles Dodgers (33-21) were so good they were bad for baseball? And they were definitely a lock to set the all-time record for wins in a season, right?

As they say, this is why they play the games.

The reality is that the Dodgers are not on pace to finish with the most wins in baseball history. In fact, they don’t even have the best record in MLB. They’re tied for fourth, and projected to win the NL West with ‘only’ 94 victories.

Can the surprising San Francisco Giants (31-23) stay with the rival Dodgers? Our model thinks so, projecting them to finish just 2.4 wins behind LA.

The San Diego Padres (30-22) have won two in a row after a dismal 5-11 stretch. Jackson Merrill hit 28 for 60 (.467) with four homers, four doubles and 17 RBIs in his first 15 games this season, but he’s since batted 8 for 48 (.167) with no homers, one double and one RBI in his last 12.

He’s still just two hits away from becoming the second-youngest Padre (22 years, 38 days) in franchise history to reach 200 in his career (Roberto Alomar – 21 years, 113 days).

Will the Colorado Rockies (9-45) break the 2024 Chicago White Sox’s record for most losses in a season? It’s going to be close, according to our projections. They may avoid that mark, but they are also on pace (by far) to become the worst team in the modern era, per TRACR.

Lowest Single-Season TRACR (Since 1901)

-3.07 – 2025 Colorado Rockies -2.57 – 1932 Boston Red Sox -2.54 – 1924 Boston Braves -2.45 – 1915 Philadelphia Athletics -2.41 – 1945 Philadelphia Phillies

AL East

The New York Yankees (33-20) sit atop our power rankings, but they’ve been even better than our model expected after losing Juan Soto in the offseason.

Then they lost ace Gerrit Cole to Tommy John surgery, and still have made the fourth-largest jump in TRACR since the preseason projections.

As a result of their six-game winning streak, the Tampa Bay Rays (27-26) have surged from 19th in our TRACR power rankings to ninth.

The Toronto Blue Jays (26-27), Boston Red Sox (27-29) and Orioles are all projected to finish with fewer than 80 wins, leaving the former powerhouse division with just two teams expected to end up above .500.

The Baltimore Orioles (19-34), who were 33-18 heading into May 27 a year ago, have won a season-high three in a row. But have the once-mighty young team buried itself into too big of a hole to dig out?

Even after their win streak, the O’s are on pace for the fifth-largest decrease in winning percentage from one season to the next since the divisional era began.

Largest Decrease in Win Pct – Since 1969

1997-98 Florida Marlins (-.235) 1981-82 Cincinnati Reds (-.234) 2024-25 Colorado Rockies (-.210) 2003-04 Arizona Diamondbacks (-.204) 2024-25 Baltimore Orioles (-.204)

AL Central

It may have been fair to ask whether a 31-13 finish in 2024 was a fluke. But now the Detroit Tigers (35-20) have gone an MLB-best 66-33 since Aug. 11 of last year.

The Tigers are well-rounded with an lineup that ranks second in O-TRACR and a pitching staff that ranks fifth in raw value. Our model is convinced, giving them the third-highest probability (20.0%) of reaching the World Series behind the Yankees (39.1%) and Cubs (27.3%).

The Central could have a huge say in the AL wild-card race once again, with three teams projected to win between 82-86 games. (The Rays are projected to be the first wild-card team at 86.5 victories.)

Bobby Witt Jr. is leading the Kansas City Royals (29-26) in runs, hits, doubles, triples and stolen bases. He’s the only player in 2025 leading his team in each of those categories. The Minnesota Twins (29-24) have gone 16-6 (.727) in May so far. The last time they won at least 75.0% of their games in a single calendar month (min. 10 games) was April 2002, when they went 18-6.

The Cleveland Guardians (29-24) have had three games with three or more errors this season, tied with the Red Sox for second-most in the majors, behind the woeful Rockies (five).

The Chicago White Sox (17-37) aren’t good, but they aren’t nearly as bad as they were last season. They have the sixth-highest differential between preseason TRACR and current TRACR (+0.90), and are projected to have a plus-22 win increase over 2024.

AL West

How does our model project what is perhap the most jumbled divisions baseball? With a familiar team at the top.

Though the Houston Astros (28-25) entered Tuesday’s action 1.5 games behind the Seattle Mariners (29-23), the Astros rank first in the division in O-TRACR, second in D-TRACR and easily first overall (0.73 to Seattle’s 0.17).

That’s part of the reason why we project them to return to the top of the West by four games over the Mariners, who should remain in the wild-card hunt.

The Texas Rangers (26-29) have the best D-TRACR in the AL West and rank fifth in all of baseball in starting pitching raw value. Jacob deGrom has a 2.42 ERA in 20 career starts with Texas, the third-lowest ERA through 20 starts with the franchise behind only Mike Paul’s 2.24 by Mike Paul (all 20 starts in 1972) and Dick Donovan’s 2.37 (all 20 starts in 1961).

The Los Angeles Angels (25-28) worked their way back into the conversation in the West with eight straight wins, but they’ve since dropped three in a row. Los Angeles averaged 7.6 runs per game during its win streak but has managed just three total runs in its three losses.

After a promising start, the Athletics (23-31) have lost six straight series – tied for the second-longest series losing streak in MLB this season (Rockies, active 17 series losing streak). It is tied for the fourth-longest series losing streak by the A’s since 2009.

Stats and facts provided by Stats Perform’s data insights team.

2025 MLB Playoff Predictions: Where Teams Project to Finish at the Memorial Day Marker Opta Analyst.

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