The Times’ Major League Baseball rankings
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THE CONTENDERS
1. WASHINGTON (4-1) Three names: Gio Gonzalez, Stephen Strasburg, Bryce Harper
2. SAN FRANCISCO (3-2) Best starting rotation in the major leagues
3. DETROIT (3-2) After reaching Series in ’12, Cabrera, Verlander hungry to win one this year
4. CINCINNATI (3-1) Stable lineup, stable manager will soften loss of OF Ryan Ludwick
5. DODGERS (2-2) Guggenheim Partners’ pockets deeper than the Marianas Trench
6. BALTIMORE (3-1) Had first winning season in 15 years in 2012
7. TAMPA BAY (2-2) Only one member of Rays’ standout rotation is older than 27
8. TEXAS (3-2) Solid rotation, experienced roster and 19 games with the Astros
9. ST. LOUIS (1-3) Made playoffs three times in last four seasons
10. ATLANTA (3-1) MLB’s youngest roster + weak division = playoff spot
11. ANGELS (2-3) Trout, Pujols, Hamilton, Trumbo give Halos new Murderers’ Row
12. TORONTO (2-3) Busy off-season proved ownership is all in
13. MILWAUKEE (1-3) Led the NL in scoring last season
14. CHICAGO (AL) (3-2) Spent 126 days atop division in Robin Ventura’s debut as manager
15. CLEVELAND (2-2) Terry Francona brings a pedigree and a new attitude to the Tribe
16. PHILADELPHIA (1-3) Aging roster could have one final pennant run in it
THE PRETENDERS
17. ARIZONA (3-1) Despite deep rotation and solid lineup, will have trouble keeping up in NL West
18. OAKLAND (3-2) Lost two members of rotation that posted third-best ERA in AL last year
19. NEW YORK (AL) (1-4) Yankees have MLB’s oldest roster, plus $84 million on the DL
20. BOSTON (3-2) Only four active players remain from 2007 champions
21. PITTSBURGH (1-3) Pirates a combined 38-77 after Aug. 1 last two seasons
22. SAN DIEGO (1-3) Gave up 21 runs in first series of season
23. KANSAS CITY (2-2) No regular starter older than 29
24. SEATTLE (3-3) Future could be bright, but present will be a little grim
25. MINNESOTA (2-2) See Seattle above. Plus Twins play in a deep division
26. NEW YORK (NL) (3-2) No Santana, no Dickey, no hope
27. COLORADO (3-1) Rotation returnees were a combined 11-17 in 2012
28. CHICAGO (NL) (2-2) 101 losses last year may be remembered as the “good old days”
29. MIAMI (1-3) Needed 20 innings to score their first run of the season
30. HOUSTON (1-3) Shut out twice in first three games, set record with 56 strikeouts in first four
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