The wild-card round is particularly challenging to forecast. Think of it as the first round of the NCAA Tournament, if every first-round game was an 8 vs. 9 coin flip. The team with fewer regular season wins is 9-3 in the best-of-three wild card series since 2022.
And since this is only a four-round tournament, your entire bracket can be in tatters with one wrong pick.
In other words: Don’t blame us if these picks go sideways. Here’s our best guesses as to how the next three days will unfold.
No. 3 Cleveland Guardians (88-74) vs. No. 6 Detroit Tigers (87-75)
The Tigers appeared headed for a first-round bye and the Guardians looked ready for October tee times before Detroit went 7-17 in September while Cleveland roared to a 20-8 finish to complete their comeback from a 15 1/2-game deficit — the largest ever overcome by a division champ.
But there’s that old cliche about momentum being the next day’s starting pitcher, and Detroit’s starter today is likely repeat Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal. Pitching and offense win in the playoffs and the Guardians have none of the latter. Cleveland’s 643 runs scored are the third-fewest for a playoff team in a full season during the wild card era.
Plus, ending the regular season in rollicking fashion and then losing in the first round of the playoffs is the most Cleveland thing possible. It already happened in 2013 and 2017!
PREDICTION: Tigers in 2
No. 4 New York Yankees (94-68) vs. No. 5 Boston Red Sox (89-73)
The Red Sox are missing star rookie outfielder Roman Anthony (oblique) and No. 3 starter Lucas Giolito (elbow). Closer Aroldis Chapman had a monster regular season but is synonymous with October meltdowns.
Yet…the Yankees are 23-26 against playoff teams this season and still prone to the fundamental mistakes that cost them in last year’s World Series. The Red Sox will start a true ace, Garrett Crochet, tonight. And Boston is 24-15 against the Yankees over the last three years. If the Yankees get out of this series, they’ll probably win the pennant. And yet…
PREDICTION: Red Sox in 3
No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers (93-69) vs. No. 6 Cincinnati Reds (83-79)
The Reds “earned” the final wild card berth by stumbling just a little bit less down the stretch than the New York Mets. But Cincinnati has some giant slayer capabilities here with Hunter Greene, Zack Littell and Andrew Abbott lined up to start. And there are few managers better prepared for the postseason gauntlet than the Hall of Fame-bound Terry Francona, who came out of retirement to do what he does best — win on a budget. Don’t be surprised if Cincinnati pulls a Princeton in 1989. At least.
PREDICTION: Dodgers in 3
No. 4 Chicago Cubs (92-70) vs. No. 5 San Diego Padres (90-72)
Yet the Cubs still feel like a safer bet than the ever-combustible Padres, who have a bullpen for the ages but also scored the fewest runs and produced the highest rotation ERA of any NL playoff team. San Diego is also more prone to head-scratching fundamental miscues than anyone in the field — even the Yankees. Leon Durham finally gets his revenge for 1984.
PREDICTION: Cubs in 2

