The Los Angeles Angels arrived on Tuesday in Washington gripping the second wild card in the American League, a position they had held for three days. They had a menagerie of pursuers, mediocre in quality and comical in number, so many that it would have been unwieldy to peer at the scoreboard and deduce a rooting interest.
โSix weeks is a lifetime of baseball,โ Manager Mike Scioscia said. โThereโs a lot that can happen.โ
In the delightful mess of the ALโs wild card chase, even one night can feel like a lifetime. By the wee hours of Wednesday morning, the Angels had lost to the Nationals and watched a procession of results, culminating with the Kansas City Royalsโ 10-8 loss to Oakland on the West Coast, which solidified their present status. It left them clinging to playoff position still, half a game up despite a 61-59 record. Losses by the Twins and Royals prevented the second wild card spot from changing hands for the 13th time โ 13th! โ since July 1.
By decree of Major League Baseball rules, some team is going to qualify as the second wild card in the American League. There will be a road team on the night of Oct. 3, when the two best non-division winners play for entry into the AL Division Series. It has to happen. As we are finding out this year, it doesnโt have to make any sense.
The Angels entered Wednesday night holding the second wild card spot in the American League. Six teams stand within two games, and seven โ more than half the league โ are within 3ยฝ. The Twins, Royals, Orioles, Mariners, Rays, Rangers and Blue Jays all can persuade themselves they still have a path to October. One good week and a little luck, and a playoff spot may be theirs.
Those eight teams jockeying meekly for the second wild card share an odd common trait for a playoff race: None of them is any good. Only one, the Rangers, have scored more runs than they have allowed. Only three โ the Angels, Twins and Royals โ own a record above .500. None can boast both a winning record and a positive run differential.
It is a race that can be confusing even for the participants. โI know that thereโs a bunchโ of teams in contention, was all Mike Trout could decipher. Even if the Angels did not view scoreboard watching as a โdistractionโ โ Sciosciaโs word โ how were they to know who to pull for when Baltimore (two games back entering Tuesday night) lost to Seattle (2ยฝ back)?
โThereโs a whole new division thatโs created as a Major League Baseball season goes โ a whole new division,โ Scioscia said. โYou never thought you were in a division with Kansas City. Well, here you are. You never thought you were in a division with Minnesota.โ
It is a race that can make checking the morning standings a dizzying ordeal. Since July 1, the second wild card has changed hands 12 times including ties, between six different teams: the Rays, Royals, Twins, Yankees, Mariners and, finally, Angels. Los Angeles seized the position four days ago, which makes their reign tied for third-longest during that stretch.
It is a race that can give you whiplash. The Twins traded for Jamie Garcia in an attempt to bulwark their playoff hopes โฆ then proceeded to lose six out of seven games to drop to 50-54 โฆ then flipped Garcia to the Yankees and dealt closer Brandon Kintzler to the Nationals for prospects โฆ then reeled off six victories in seven games.
The Twins would have moved into playoff position with a victory on Tuesday, and FanGraphs pegged their playoff odds at 20.2 percent entering the night. In this race, even giving up doesnโt mean youโre out of it.
If the Twins feel any regret over their choice to sell, they ought to let it go. Their current condition proves that even half-lousy teams arenโt out of the wild card race until September, if they ever are. But teams also must be aware of what theyโre playing for.
Even now, in position to sneak into the postseason, the Twins have about a 1 in 5 shot to have a 50 percent crack to play in the first round. Yes, that means they have a chance to win the World Series. But itโs not a big enough one to justify sacrificing a chance to improve their future outlook.
And this year, even if randomness rules in a five-game series, the second wild card will be particularly overmatched in the division series. The AL could produce a new low. In the first five years of the dual wild card format, the 2015 Houston Astros snuck into the postseason with the fewest wins, at 86. Plenty of teams could get hot and surpass that total, but the Angels are on pace for 83 wins.
It may not be pretty. But it creates precisely what MLB wanted when it instituted the second wild card: More teams can talk themselves into contention, and more cities can hang on meaningful baseball games into the early fall. The postseason chase is not producing excellence, or anything close.
Chaos, along with a nightly smorgasbord of meaningful games, isnโt such a bad alternative. A playoff race doesnโt have to make sense to be a whole lot of fun.
Barry Svrluga contributed to this story.
