Hot Corner Harbor: The Big 2025 MLB Postseason Trivia Roundup!


I don’t know that I have much specific to say about this year’s entry in my annual Playoff Trivia Series. Especially not after last year’s version, where I had to fit writing the entire thing in after that last-day double header. This is so much nicer of an experience (especially coming right on the heels of the huge Playlist article that I just published over at Out of Left Field).

Anyway, as a refresher, for those of you looking for a team to bandwagon for this postseason, perhaps this column will be of some use! That’s how it started, as a way for me to compile a whole bunch of interesting factoids about each year’s set of playoff teams and maybe give neutral observers some direction on fun storylines like long droughts or deserving players searching for a win, and it’s been a fun routine for me to preview October every year. So after a brief interruption for the Hot Corner Harbor email list sign-up form, let’s get right into it!


DROUGHTS

You may not have realized it if you haven’t sat and thought about it yet, but this is actually a fairly cursed set of playoff teams. Our dozen teams includes all four of the longest active World Series droughts. There’s of course Cleveland at the top (last win in 1948), they’re well into that upper-echelon of dry spells. You know, that point where almost every span above them got a fancy title “The Curse of”? I’m not sure if Cleveland fans have settled on a cause of their misfortunes yet, but this might be the point where they should start looking for one.

After them, it’s a bunch of expansion teams who have never won a title. Those usually don’t seem to get “Curse of” titles, for whatever reason; I guess because expansion teams are just expected to be bad? Now that the first wave of new teams from 1961 and ‘62 are all taken care of, the Padres and Brewers (established in 1969) share the runner up title, while 1977 additions the Mariners are our fourth-place team.

It’s not often you get the entire top four in October like this. By my count, the only other time it happened was 2015, which was thanks to the Cubs, Guardians, Rangers, and Astros all showing up. That kind of gets to an interesting point, which is that in the first quarter of the 21st century, we’ve actually lost a lot of our Mega-Droughts. Obviously you have the big three of the Cubs, Red Sox, and White Sox. But the Giants, Astros, Nationals, and Rangers were all also at the fifty-year mark as well, and even the Angels took over four decades to make it to the top when they made it back in 2002. That’s a lot of heavy hitters that just aren’t around any more, making it more shocking that we still see years like this one.

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