With four baseball beats in three different markets around the country, an All-Star cast of journalists and prognosticators from All-City Media have the picks that will pay on DraftKings Sportsbook for the 2022 MLB Season.
Here are the fab four that will try to go on the greatest of runs in predicting each division, postseason contender and end-of-year award:
Lyons: With the NL Central lacking a certain quality, there’s a chance that Milwaukee and St. Louis could both make it. The Cubs are suspect, but could possibly take the final wild card. Since there’s always one team that defies the odds, it wouldn’t surprise me if either the Cubbies, Marlins or Rockies are that shocker.
Friedman: The NL East is going to be a lot of fun this year. The Braves, Phillies and Mets are all serious contenders. The Brewers will probably win the Central by 10-plus games. I’m not sure how any of them are going to beat the Dodgers, who are still running out one of the best lineups in MLB history even after trading A.J. Pollock.
Herrera: The Dodgers went all in (or more all in than they already have) by signing Freddie Freeman this offseason, and they’re rightfully the World Series favorites heading into the season. They’ll have some stiff competition for the crown, including from teams in their own division, but ultimately, the National League is starting to feel like it will run through L.A.
Duber: I know they didn’t win the pennant last year. I know they didn’t win their division last year. But the always-dominant Dodgers are even more dangerous after adding Freddie Freeman to their stable of MVPs. It’s their pennant to lose.
American League
Patrick
Jesse
Ryan
Vinnie
AL East
TOR
TOR
TOR
TOR
AL Central
CHW
CHW
CHW
CHW
AL West
HOU
HOU
LAA
SEA
AL Wild Card #1
TB
NYY
NYY
TB
AL Wild Card #2
NYY
TB
HOU
HOU
AL Wild Card #3
SEA
LAA
TB
NYY
Lyons: The AL East is always a giant and this year is no exception. Both the Red Sox and Yankee rotations are a bit questionable, so only one of them can be lucky enough to work through that. Meanwhile, Tampa Bay and Toronto look deep and poised to be the best in the junior circuit.
Friedman: The American League is a toss-up. I like the Blue Jays the best, but they’ll need to bolster their bullpen at some point. The White Sox are next in line. I know we’re used to pencilling in the Rays as a serious contender every year, but they don’t have an ace. I wouldn’t be surprised if they drop from the postseason picture entirely.
Herrera: There are multiple teams that can realistically claim to be the American League favorite, and it will certainly be a heated battle between the teams at the top. The White Sox have the core of a contender, the Blue Jays got stronger, the Angels can make a surprise run behind Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout, and teams such as the Yankees, Rays and Astros haven’t gone anywhere. The AL playoffs will be one heckuva ride.
Duber: The White Sox don’t figure to have a ton of trouble winning the Central (though more trouble than last year). It’s the playoffs that will test them, specifically the bulked-up Blue Jays and those same old Astros. But the rebuild has crescendoed to this point.
MLB Playoffs
Patrick
Jesse
Ryan
Vinnie
ALCS Matchup
TOR-TB
TOR-CHW
TOR-CHW
CHW-TOR
AL Champ
TOR
TOR
CHW
CHW
NLCS Matchup
LAD-MIL
LAD-NYM
LAD-ATL
LAD-NYM
NL Champ
LAD
LAD
LAD
LAD
World Series Champ
LAD
TOR
LAD
LAD
Bold Predictions
Lyons: Scherzer & deGrom make back-to-back starts only twice this season. Only Chicago has a winning record in the AL Central.
Friedman: The San Francisco Giants follow up their 107-win season by finishing under .500 in 2022. Byron Buxton finishes second behind Mike Trout in AL MVP voting.
Herrera: Despite getting three teams in the playoffs, the Dodgers win the NL West by the largest margin of any division in MLB. Shohei Ohtani leads the AL in both home runs as a hitter and wins as a pitcher.
Duber: The NL East comes down to the season’s final day. White Sox win the Triple Crown as a team: Tim Anderson batting average, Eloy Jimenez home runs and Jose Abreu RBI.
National League Awards
Patrick
Jesse
Ryan
Vinnie
NL MVP
Bryce Harper
Juan Soto
Juan Soto
Mookie Betts
NL Cy Young Award
Max Fried
Max Scherzer
Walker Buehler
Max Scherzer
NL Rookie of the Year
Seiya Suzuki
Seiya Suzuki
Seiya Suzuki
Seiya Suzuki
NL Manager of the Year
Bob Melvin
Buck Showalter
Dave Roberts
Bob Melvin
Lyons: Someone always comes out of the blue to step up in a major way in the NL Cy Young Award voting. Max Fried was solid last season and had enough big starts in the postseason with Atlanta to convince me he’ll be the guy this year.
Friedman: Somehow Max Scherzer hasn’t won a Cy Young award since 2017. I think he’s got one more in him before his career is over.
Herrera: It’s insane to think that Juan Soto is still just 23 years old considering how big of a superstar he’s been in MLB. He already finished as runner up for the NL MVP award last season after coming onto the scene three years earlier. It feels like 2022 could shape up to be his year to take home that award and truly stake his claim as the top player in the NL.
Duber: Typically, when a team’s stacked with MVP types, none of them win it because they cancel each other out. But that Mookie Betts guy is good enough to stand out from the crowd of Dodger Blue. On the pitching side, Max Scherzer is going to give the Mets what they paid for.
Lyons: We are now in the midst of the next generation of the great players: Bobby Witt Jr. (KC), Spencer Torkelson (DET), Julio Rodriguez (SEA) and Adley Rutschman (BAL). If more of these players get a chance to start the season on Opening-Day rosters, the All-Star Game will begin to look like a rerun of the 2021 Futures Game. I’d gladly build a team around whoever finishes fifth in AL Rookie of the Year Award voting.
Friedman: Sometimes we forget that Mike Trout is, uh, really freaking good. After losing almost an entire year to injury, he’s bound to return to form. The AL rookie class is off-the-charts talented this year, but I’m taking Julio RodrÃguez for Rookie of the Year. All he did this spring was bat .412 with seven extra-base hits in 14 games.
Herrera: Shane Bieber missed basically the entire last half of 2021, save for two three-inning outings in September, so it’s hard to say that he truly got the chance to defend his 2020 AL Cy Young. That won’t be the case this year. The Guardians might struggle and it will definitely depend on Bieber’s health, but a resurgent season that puts him square in the Cy Young conversation is a very real scenario for Bieber’s 2022 campaign.
Duber: You don’t sleep on future Hall of Famers when it comes to late-career performance, and Justin Verlander could do it all over again for the Astros, not just delivering one of the best individual seasons in the AL but carrying that rotation deep into October. Meanwhile, Tim Anderson makes the White Sox go. He’s their MVP. It’s high time he was the league’s MVP, too.
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