The Times’ baseball rankings
Last week’s ranking in parentheses, statistics are through Friday’s games:
1. ANGELS: Postseason appearances: Six in 15 years under Mike Scioscia, three in 38 years before Scioscia. (1)
2. BALTIMORE: So, if the Orioles and Washington reach the World Series, is it called the Beltway Series ... (2)
3. WASHINGTON: … or the Parkway Series? Descendants of the Browns vs. Descendants of the Expos? (3)
4. DETROIT: Closer Joe Nathan: 94 batters faced since All-Star break, zero home runs but 1.7 WHIP. (7)
5. DODGERS: Don Mattingly outdoes Tom Lasorda, opens managerial career with four winning seasons in a row. (5)
6. ST. LOUIS: Close to winning second division title in a row despite trades for Lackey (4.50 ERA) and Masterson (7.53). (8)
7. KANSAS CITY: Royals’ best attendance, just shy of 2 million, since George Brett’s farewell season in 1993. (9)
8. PITTSBURGH: Russell Martin has the highest OBP in majors (minimum 400 plate appearances). (10)
9. SAN FRANCISCO: All that and catching too: Buster Posey leads NL with .358 average, .995 OPS since All-Star break. (4)
10. OAKLAND: Angels lost 14 games in AL West standings in 49 days in 1995. A’s lost 15 1/2 games in 40 days this year. (13)
11. SEATTLE: Felix Hernandez has 16 career games with no earned runs given up, 10 strikeouts and no victory. (6)
12. CLEVELAND: Corey Kluber (16-9, 2.54 ERA) is up from 160 innings last year to career-high 220 this year. (15)
13. MILWAUKEE: Brewers had at least a share of first place every day through Aug. 31. Playoffs? Probably on TV. (11)
14. NEW YORK YANKEES: Can Masahiro Tanaka return from torn elbow ligament without surgery? He’ll try Sunday. (16)
15. SAN DIEGO: Padres score 3.27 runs per game, home and away. They give up 2.97 runs per game at home, 4.14 away.
16. ATLANTA: Braves’ 4-12 record in September is the worst in the majors. (14)
17. CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Final week of distinguished career of Paul Konerko (.604 OPS this year). (23)
18. TAMPA BAY: Publicity gem: Manager Joe Maddon wears T-shirt of different nonprofit to news conference each day. (17)
19. TORONTO: If Royals make the playoffs, the Blue Jays will be the team with the longest postseason drought, 21 years. (12)
20. NEW YORK METS: Casey Stengel bobblehead fitting for team with six consecutive losing seasons. (18)
21. BOSTON: David Ortiz has nine 30 HR/100 RBI seasons for Red Sox, breaking Ted Williams’ franchise record. (21)
22. MIAMI: Giancarlo Stanton, whose season ended after being hit on the face, plans to wear helmet with a face guard. (24)
23. MINNESOTA: Complete list of teams scoring more runs since All-Star break than Twins: Tigers. That’s it. (26)
24. COLORADO: Troy Tulowitzki played two games after All-Star break, likely to finish second on team in home runs. (28)
26. CINCINNATI: More likely to strike out than not against closer Aroldis Chapman: 161 batters faced, 94 strikeouts. (25)
25. HOUSTON: Rookie first baseman Jon Singleton is benched after 12 strikeouts in 14 at-bats. (20)
27. CHICAGO CUBS: One of two teams to score three runs in an inning against Clayton Kershaw this season. (27)
28. TEXAS: Ron Washington’s ill-advised news conference: No questions taken, no answers provided. (29)
29. PHILADELPHIA: Ryan Howard against left-handers: HR every 14.5 at-bats; strikeout every 2.3 at-bats. (22)
30. ARIZONA: Giant slayer Dave Stewart could be a GM David to the Dodgers’ Goliath. (30)
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.