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MLB Power Rankings: Why it’s time to stop questioning the Guardians, plus Astros continue surge

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1


Phillies
They’ve already dealt with injuries to Trea Turner and JT Realmuto. Now it’s Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber. Fortunately, both injuries here seem minor. And even in a week that seemed lackluster by the lofty standards of the 2024 Phillies, they had a winning record and didn’t lose a series. — 55-29
2


Guardians
Through Tuesday, I was set to finally push the Guardians up into the No. 1 spot. They had earned it with consistent winning all season and then by taking two games in Baltimore. They must have sensed it, because then the Guardians dropped four of five to close the week. I get it. Taking the mantle in my Power Rankings carries a ton of prestige and not every team can deal with it. On a serious note, I was pretty disappointed that they dropped these games. My intro above would’ve matched perfectly with them sitting at No. 1. 2 52-30
3


Orioles
Confirmed Home Run Derby participant Gunnar Henderson has 26 home runs at just past the halfway point. The only Orioles to ever reach 50 homers in a season are Chris Davis (53 in 2013) and Brady Anderson (50 in 1996). If I drop the criteria to 45, it only adds Frank Robinson, Mark Trumbo and Jim Gentile to the mix. 1 53-31
4


Dodgers
A seven-run inning in extras is hilarious. Might’ve been even better if they won the series, but still! Anyway, there’s an argument they should be second or even first, but that ain’t happening here until the rotation gets a lot healthier. 1 52-33
5


Yankees
A tale of two starts for Gerrit Cole. He looked absolutely awful against the Mets and there had to be concern he was still hurt. Sunday, he seemed mostly like himself — especially with the fastball velocity being back. Encouraging, even amid the Yankees overall playing poorly right now. 2 54-32
6


Brewers
Heading into the year, I thought the NL Central would be the closest race and include the most teams legitimately in said race late into the season — maybe even all five teams into September. Halfway home and the Brewers lead by 6.5 games and they’ve already put three teams at least 9.5 out. 1 50-34
7


Braves
Eight games seems like a huge deficit, but the Braves still have 10 head-to-head games left against the Phillies, starting with three this coming weekend in Atlanta. If they sweep, all of a sudden the East seems workable. 1 46-36
8


Twins
Byron Buxton just got hot, Carlos Correa is having a much better year, Royce Lewis is healthy (at least for now), Carlos Santana has been swinging it well for weeks and Jose Miranda looks great. This gives a decent idea of how the Twins could be dangerous in the postseason, if they manage to make it. 2 47-37
9


Royals
A 5-2 week including taking three of four from the impressive Guardians at home might be just what the Royals needed. Have they ended their tailspin? 2 47-39
10


Padres
The Padres had won nine of 10 before Sunday’s loss, but they can’t be expected to sweep the Red Sox in Fenway. Overall, the Padres seem to have steadied themselves and this past week did so without Fernando Tatis Jr. 4 46-42
11


Astros
The rotation remains worrisome, but Luis Garcia has started a rehab assignment and Hunter Brown has a 1.47 ERA in his last seven starts. And after the horrible start, the Astros could well be in first by the All-Star break. 1 42-41
12


Red Sox
Tanner Houck had allowed two homers all year — in 103 1/3 innings — before Saturday. He allowed three in 4 1/3 innings Saturday. Maybe it was just temporary regression. 4 44-39
13


Mariners
I know the rotation might be the most important thing in the playoffs, but watching the Mariners leaves a knee-jerk reaction that the offense is just so bad that they can’t possibly make a deep playoff run. We’ll see what Jerry Dipoto has up his sleeve in the next month. 4 47-39
14


Cardinals
The Cardinals have the worst record among teams in a playoff position right now and they are three games over .500. I’m sad. I really thought we’d get a shot at a losing record for a playoff team, but it seems we’re starting to see some separation. 1 43-40
15


Mets
Even if the Mets end up being sellers (which doesn’t appear to be likely right now), youngsters at the MLB level like Mark Vientos and Francisco Alvarez give plenty of optimism for the near future. What a fun run the offense is having. — 40-41
16


Rays
Rather quietly, the Rays have won four straight series against not-terrible teams (Twins, Pirates, Mariners, Nationals). 3 42-42
17


Diamondbacks
So much for what looked like a productive offseason in building a strong rotation. Eduardo Rodríguez still hasn’t pitched and Jordan Montgomery remains broken. — 41-43
18


Pirates
I was asked on a radio spot this week to pick a team that “no one is thinking about” who could pull a 2023 Diamondbacks. I said the Pirates, so I’m putting it on record here: It’s not a ridiculous assertion. Obviously the odds are against it, but I can squint my way there. 2 40-43
19


Giants
They entered last week having lost five in a row and looking every bit that bad. Then they went home and went 5-2, including taking two of three from the Dodgers. It was like two different teams. That’s baseball for ya. 4 41-44
20


Nationals
The Nats dropped five of six to close their road trip. Still, they have an opportunity before the All-Star break to prove they belong in the NL wild-card race, as their next 11 games come against the Mets (seven) and Cardinals (four). 2 39-44
21


Reds
Noelvi Marte is back from his suspension and Matt McLain has started doing baseball activities in trying to return from injury. It’s possible the Reds get everyone right down the stretch and make a run, but they keep digging their own hole. — 39-45
22


Blue Jays
The Jays have four at home against the Astros before concluding the first half on the road in Seatte, San Francisco and Arizona. I’ll wager that road trip buries them and by the All-Star break we’re talking about the Jays as heavy sellers. 2 38-45
23


Rangers
Tell the truth, Rangers fans: How many of you thought last October something like, “just win the World Series and I don’t even care how next year goes.” Yeah, this is the price you pay and it is WELL WORTH IT. 7 38-46
24


Cubs
Remember when a few people felt sorry for David Ross? He’s making over $2 million this season to sit at home and not deal with this mess of an organization. He’s laughing all the way to the bank. 2 39-46
25


Angels
Kudos to the Angels for a season-high six-game winning streak. They finished June 15-11, which is much better than they should be, given the current roster. 1 36-47
26


Tigers
Jack Flaherty has 115 strikeouts against 14 walks in 89 innings this season. The Tigers are moving themselves firmly into non-contender status, so Flaherty might be a hot commodity on a possibly-dry trade market. 1 38-46
27


Marlins
Look, Tanner Scott is great — other than that dreadful walk rate — but it’s probably a bad sign when a reliever leads your team in WAR. 1 30-54
28


Athletics
Man, remember when the A’s climbed to .500 at 17-17? They are 13-39 since then. 1 30-56
29


Rockies
The Road Rockies lost two of three to the pathetic White Sox and are now 12-31. Never change, Road Rockies. Never change. — 28-55
30


White Sox
This is Chris Getz’s first trade deadline as the man in charge and it’s a big one. Garrett Crochet and Luis Robert might be incredibly attractive on the open market, but Crochet is under team control through 2026 and Robert has club options through 2027. Is Getz willing to pull the trigger and tell the fans they are punting through 2026? — 24-62

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