The teams we can't get enough of right now.
Passan: Yes, the Rays' 9-0 start came against the dregs of MLB in Detroit, Washington and Oakland -- teams Tampa Bay should beat. And yet it's impossible to ignore just how thoroughly the Rays thumped them. They are the first team since 1884 with a run differential of more than 50 over their first nine games of the season. They've scored the most runs (75) in baseball and allowed the fewest (18). Their 21 home runs lead the big leagues, and they have the fewest strikeouts with 51. They have generated more ground balls and walked fewer hitters than any team in the American League.
The Rays play an eminently enjoyable brand of baseball. They are simultaneously clean and powerful, exciting and efficient. They are loaded with ballplayers' ballplayers. And with
Shane McClanahan,
Jeffrey Springs,
Drew Rasmussen,
Zach Eflin and, soon enough, Tyler Glasnow, they will be just fine pitching their way through a schedule that goes full nightmare -- Yankees, Orioles, Yankees, Mets, Brewers, Blue Jays, Dodgers -- starting May 5.
Doolittle: There's something special brewing in Milwaukee, and I'll leave it up to you to decide whether the pun was intended. The Brewers are underappreciated for their consistent winning in recent years, even if they missed the postseason last season. This year's team is fun. You have great resurgence stories (
Brian Anderson,
Jesse Winker) and a trio of rookies in
Garrett Mitchell,
Joey Wiemer and
Brice Turang, all friends who have infused the team with energy, ability, enthusiasm and cheesehead-related celebration. And they are just the vanguard, because wait until Sal Frelick and Jackson Chourio join the party. This is a really good team that has a chance to be the best yet in the Brewers' run of winning. And the emergent personality of this revitalized roster is one of pure joy.
Schoenfield: Baseball fans like offense, and the Braves are my bet to lead the majors in runs scored -- and they'll do it with a dynamic core of young and in-their-prime players.
Ronald Acuna Jr. and
Michael Harris II have a reasonable shot of becoming just the third pair of 30-30 teammates in MLB history (joining Howard Johnson and Darryl Strawberry of the 1987 Mets and Dante Bichette and Ellis Burks of the 1996 Rockies).
Austin Riley is coming off back-to-back top-10 MVP finishes.
Matt Olson is up there like he's ready to stop chopping wood, with his hands high and outstretched from his body, daring pitchers to go inside on him.
Ozzie Albies is a slugger in a No. 9 hitter's body. Travis d'Arnaud and
Sean Murphy add depth.
That's just the lineup. Every fifth game you get one of the most electric starters in the game in
Spencer Strider, coming off a rookie season in which he averaged an absurd 13.8 strikeouts per nine innings and finished second in the National League Rookie of the Year voting -- behind his teammate Harris. The Braves might have another pop-up ROY candidate in lefty
Dylan Dodd, who pounds the strike zone. And when he returns soon from the injured list, they have a Cy Young contender in the coolly efficient Max Fried. The Braves are good -- and nothing is more fun than winning.
Gonzalez: It remains to be seen whether these Padres will have the depth and the precision to live up to lofty expectations and bring San Diego its first major professional championship -- but there's no doubt they're going to be exciting. Beginning April 20, we'll get to see
Fernando Tatis Jr.,
Juan Soto,
Manny Machado and
Xander Bogaerts hitting back-to-back-to-back-to-back on a semi-regular basis, and that alone might be enough to make them baseball's most exciting team. We're talking, respectively, about arguably the most electrifying player in the sport, followed by arguably the best pure hitter in the sport, followed by a potential Hall of Fame third baseman in his prime, followed by a potential Hall of Fame shortstop in his prime. The drama surrounding Tatis'
return from a PED suspension, while being among many Padres players learning a semi-new position, only adds to the intrigue.
McDaniel: The O's are leading the majors in stolen bases after finishing middle of the pack last season, which speaks to their speed and ability to make adjustments, both things that tend to come with youth. If that wasn't enough, they're also in the top five in the AL in slugging percentage after finishing in the middle of the pack last year in that stat as well. Power and speed and youth are all fun, but there are swing-and-miss waiver claim types who can technically do that.
These O's have the best farm system in baseball, and half of those best young prospects are on this team right now. Baltimore has one of the best systems at developing position players, and we might be seeing that happen at the big league level, too. The pitching is behind at the moment, but that just means there's more scoring, upping the fun factor (if you aren't a die-hard fan).
Rogers: The Diamondbacks are hitting just .253 as a team -- not exactly exciting stuff -- but that only makes their National League-leading 12 stolen bases that much more interesting. Just imagine if/when they start to roll at the plate. They can turn any game into a track meet with their speed and will likely win a lot of contests using that skill. And heading into the season, the Diamondbacks organization had the second, fourth and eighth overall prospects among
Kiley McDaniel's top 100. By definition, that makes for an exciting franchise.