Spring training games have been winding down all week, pitchers have been dialing back their workloads, and in four days — Thursday, March 27 — Major League Baseball returns to full strength for its 162-game grind. Twenty-six teams will tell their fan bases that this is the year. Maybe eight of them are right.
The Los Angeles Dodgers remain the consensus pick to represent the National League deep into October. That is not a controversial position; it is the natural conclusion of watching a payroll above $350 million reassemble itself for another run. Shohei Ohtani enters his third season with the club. In 2025 he hit .309/.400/.623 with 52 home runs and made 19 starts before a lat strain in August ended his pitching season early. The question this spring is whether he can stay healthy on the mound for a full year. Manager Dave Roberts has indicated Ohtani will operate on a reduced pitching schedule — starting every six or seven days rather than the standard five — which is either a protective measure or an acknowledgment that the lat issue is not fully resolved. Probably both.
On the American League side, the New York Yankees and Houston Astros have the organizational depth to carry a flawed roster into October. The Yankees invested heavily in rotation depth this offseason after leaning too hard on Gerrit Cole in 2025. The Astros remain the Astros: they develop pitching in ways no other organization consistently replicates, they find undervalued players in unusual places, and they keep winning games they have no particular right to win.
“On the American League side, the New York Yankees and Houston Astros have the organizational depth to carry a flawed roster into October.”
Juan Soto's first full season as a Met will generate the most individual column inches between now and October. He signed a 15-year, $765 million deal with New York in November 2024 — the largest contract in professional sports history at the time of signing — and in his half-season at Citi Field after the trade deadline in 2025, hit .291/.418/.519 with 16 home runs. The expectations are enormous. That is the precondition for a narrative that can only go in two directions: confirmation that the Mets made the right call, or the beginning of a very long, very expensive public scrutiny. There is no middle ground at $765 million.
Key Takeaways
- →mlb: MLB Opening Day 2026 is Thursday, March 27, with most clubs playing their first regular-season games that day.
- →opening day 2026: MLB Opening Day 2026 is Thursday, March 27, with most clubs playing their first regular-season games that day.
- →baseball: MLB Opening Day 2026 is Thursday, March 27, with most clubs playing their first regular-season games that day.
- →los angeles dodgers: MLB Opening Day 2026 is Thursday, March 27, with most clubs playing their first regular-season games that day.
Here is the story that is not getting enough space in the national coverage: the Cleveland Guardians. Terry Francona retired after 2023. His successor, Stephen Vogt, has now had two full seasons to build a pitching staff around the void left when both Shane Bieber and Triston McKenzie required Tommy John surgery in the same calendar year — an injury coincidence that would have buried most franchises. What Vogt has assembled is quietly impressive. A four-man rotation averaging 26 years old, headlined by Gavin Williams, who went 14-7 with a 3.21 ERA last year and is one of perhaps five starting pitchers in the game who projection systems identify as a future ace. The offense remains limited. The payroll is $97 million. Expected-win models have the Guardians at 87-88 wins, which in the current AL Central means genuine playoff contention.
The fact that tends to surprise people when you raise Cleveland: they have not made the World Series since 2016. That is a longer drought than the Cubs had before breaking theirs in that exact same year. For a franchise with as much recent postseason presence as the Guardians — five playoff appearances in eight seasons — it is a statistical anomaly that has produced quiet but mounting organizational pressure. Vogt's roster is built to end that.
The rule changes for 2026 are modest. The pitch clock — which was transformative when introduced in 2023 and is now simply how baseball works — stays at 15 seconds with runners on base. MLB is expanding active rosters by one additional position player starting June 1 in a limited pilot program. Pace-of-play data from 2025 showed average game time at 2 hours and 36 minutes, down from 3 hours and 8 minutes in 2022. That is an extraordinary shift in three years and it has measurably moved younger demographic viewership numbers in ways the league spent two decades failing to achieve.
The financial backdrop is better than it has been in a decade, which is precisely why the current collective bargaining agreement — expiring after the 2026 season — is drawing careful attention from team ownership groups. The MLBPA has already signaled it will seek significant changes to pre-arbitration compensation. Those talks will begin in earnest this summer and will quietly shape whether the 2027 season opens on time.
For now, though: Opening Day. The Dodgers at home against the Cubs. The Mets in Philadelphia. Cleveland hosting Detroit. The first at-bat of a new season is still, after all the analytics and all the transactions, the best reset button in professional sports.