Excellent start for baseball's NL West foreshadows a potentially historic 4-team summer race
PHOENIX (AP) — The Los Angeles Dodgers seem like they have nearly unlimited amounts of money, three former MVPs in their starting lineup with Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman, and a pitching staff that never runs out of overpowering arms.
So far, that's good for third place in their five-team division.
Advertisement
Welcome to the National League West, which is far from a one-team show four weeks into the season. Going into Friday night's games, the San Diego Padres (17-8), San Francisco Giants (17-9), Dodgers (16-9) and Arizona Diamondbacks (14-11) are all off to a good start, foreshadowing a potentially fascinating summer race.
'For us, who are so close to it, not surprised,' Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. 'They're all very good teams. I think it's the best division in baseball. We're all sort of built differently, too, which is interesting and fun if you look at the construction, the strengths, weaknesses of the four clubs.
"It's going to be an interesting season how this all plays out.'
To be clear, the big-spending Dodgers have not underperformed this season. Los Angeles has a .640 winning percentage through 25 games, which translates to a 104-win pace. That's right where everyone pretty much expected them to be.
Advertisement
Instead, it's the great play from the Padres and Giants — and to a lesser extent the D-backs — that has set up a summer of fun. Since baseball split the NL and AL into three divisions in 1994, the 2002 AL West has the record for the highest winning percentage with a .566 mark.
So far, the 2025 version of the NL West is off to a .544 start — and that's including the Colorado Rockies, who are a dreadful 4-20 for the worst record in baseball. Take out the Rockies, and the other four teams have combined for a .634 winning percentage.
'It's gonna be a battle the entire season,' Giants third baseman Matt Chapman said. 'We knew the Dodgers are the Dodgers, the Padres are really, really good and so are the Diamondbacks.'
The Dodgers continue to be the undeniable favorites to win the division. Los Angeles is off to a quality start despite Betts' illness that caused him to drop around 15 pounds, Freeman's shower mishap and Blake Snell's arm trouble.
Advertisement
A good first month from Tommy Edman, Will Smith and Teoscar Hernández at the plate have showcased the lineup's depth. Yoshinobu Yamamoto looks like a potential NL Cy Young award winner with an 0.93 ERA through five starts. Ohtani has slugged six homers with his return to the mound looming.
The Padres are playing well largely thanks to Fernando Tatis Jr., who is off to a torrid start with a .333 batting average, eight homers and 17 RBIs. Veteran starting pitchers Nick Pivetta and Michael King have led the rotation while closer Robert Suarez hasn't given up a run this season and leads the NL with 10 saves.
'Obviously, we're aware to some degree of what is taking place in the division and in the league, but our energy — my energy — is not about what anyone else is doing. It is on what we do," Padres manager Mike Shildt said. 'We're spending our time and efforts on taking care of ourselves, because if we don't do that, nothing else is going to matter.'
The Giants are arguably the division's biggest surprise, led by a productive lineup that includes Jung Hoo Lee, Mike Yastrzemski, Wilmer Flores and Chapman. Right-hander Logan Webb has been dominant, with a 1.98 ERA and 44 strikeouts over six starts.
Advertisement
The D-backs have been a little more inconsistent than their division rivals, but are still lurking. Outfielder Corbin Carroll is off to an MVP-caliber start with a .321 batting average, nine homers, 23 RBIs and five stolen bases.
Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo echoed others when he said he's aware of the division's excellence, but tries not to dwell on it. The 162-game regular season is hard enough to navigate without worrying about other teams.
Being in the NL West might prove particularly stressful — and fun — this summer.
'At the end of the day, it makes everyone crazy,' Lovullo said, grinning. 'It makes you guys crazy, you guys make me crazy, I make you crazy. Everyone's crazy.'
___
AP Baseball Writers Janie McCauley and Jay Cohen, and freelancer Dave Hogg, contributed to this story.
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Sparks outlast Storm in offensive thriller, first double overtime game of season
SEATTLE — A week after claiming the first buzzer-beating win of the WNBA season, the Los Angeles Sparks earned the year's first double-overtime victory, outlasting the Seattle Storm 108-106 Friday in a game that featured 14 lead changes and 12 ties. It was a triumph of offensive execution for both teams in crunch time, as each made clutch shots that forced increasingly difficult responses. There were five combined baskets in the final minute of regulation and zero misses. The final minute of overtime saw a Julie Allemand drive to the basket matched by one from Skylar Diggins. And Gabby Williams' wing 3-pointer to tie the game with 16 seconds to play — capping a five-point Seattle comeback in the second extra session — was eclipsed by a pick-and-roll finish from Dearica Hamby to seal the win. Diggins' attempt at the buzzer, one day before the star's 35th birthday, couldn't force a third overtime. The Sparks ended the game with four players scoring at least 20 points, a first in franchise history. They scored their third-most points in a game, collecting their sixth win in seven tries to move to a WNBA-best 9-6 on the road. 'Everyone just did their job,' Rickea Jackson said. 'Whatever was asked of us, we executed to the T.' Jackson led the way for L.A. with 27 points, the second-highest total of her career, but arguably the best game she has ever played at the pro level. Her box-outs helped keep the Storm off the glass, especially early, and the Sparks turned to Jackson down the stretch in regulation when they needed a score to tie the game. Her ability to duck in and overpower her defender was the advantage Seattle couldn't overcome. Fellow L.A. sophomore Cameron Brink played in her second game since returning from an ACL injury suffered in June 2024. Still on a minutes limit, Brink played 12 minutes, registering two steals and three blocks, including a monster rejection on the All-Star Williams in the fourth quarter. Many of Brink's minutes came against Dominique Malonga, also a No. 2 pick, and the two dazzled with their defensive playmaking. Brink also chipped in five points on jump shots at the start of the quarter to help the Sparks stay in contact while Hamby and Azurá Stevens were on the bench. The Storm lost despite 37 points from former L.A. star Nneka Ogwumike and double-digit scoring outputs from three other starters. Afterwards, coach Noelle Quinn was disappointed in the officiating, particularly relating to her point guard. Although L.A. was whistled for 22 fouls compared to 21 for Seattle, Quinn said, '(Diggins) played 43 minutes and took zero free throws. It's ridiculous. Maybe I have to come up and rant and rave for us to get respect and consistency. That's all I want. 'I'm not a coach that complains often,' Quinn added. 'But I see what happens when people come up here and do it, so now I'm about to do it. Forty-three minutes and zero free throws is bullshit. Period.' The Storm entered the game last in the league in free-throw attempts per game (15.9) compared to 22.1 for the second-place Sparks. Diggins, however, is 10th in the WNBA with 5.1 foul shots per game, though she didn't make any trips to the line Friday. Quinn also questioned the outcome of a challenge with 58 seconds to play in regulation, with Seattle up three. L.A. appeared to lose possession out of bounds, but the referees ruled the ball off the Storm and confirmed the call upon review. 'I saw with my own eyes it go off the opponent and they said there was not enough camera angles to change that call,' Quinn said. 'Again, the lack of respect, the disrespect. I can't. I know I'm young and early in my career but I work very hard and so does my team and we deserve to get refereed consistently. We deserve to get the calls that are just blatant. But there's not enough camera angles.' L.A. remains outside of playoff position despite its recent surge, now two games behind the No. 8 seed for the final playoff spot. Seattle falls into a tie with Indiana at No. 5 before the two teams face off Sunday for the second time this season. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Seattle Storm, Los Angeles Sparks, WNBA 2025 The Athletic Media Company


Hamilton Spectator
2 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
J.P. Crawford hits 2-run homer in 9th to lift the Mariners past the Rangers, 4-3
SEATTLE (AP) — J.P. Crawford hit a two-run home run in the ninth inning to give the Seattle Mariners a 4-3 victory over the Texas Rangers on Friday night. Dominic Canzone led off the ninth with a single off closer Robert Garcia (1-6), bringing Crawford to the plate. On the third pitch Crawford saw, he sent a 95 mph fastball into the seats in right. Seattle gained another game on AL West-leading Houston and firmed its grip on the third wild-card spot by two games over the Rangers. Rowdy Tellez, Josh Smith and Marcus Semien had RBI hits in the third to give Texas a 3-1 lead. Seattle newcomer Josh Naylor had an opposite-field double in the fifth to cut it to 3-2. Eduard Bazardo (5-0) pitched the ninth for the victory. Key moment Crawford's homer in the ninth. Key stat Crawford had the first walkoff homer of his major league career. Up next Merrill Kelly (9-6, 3.22 ERA) was set to make his Rangers debut Saturday, with Luis Castillo (8-6, 3.19 ERA) set to start for the Mariners. ___ AP MLB:


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Sparks outlast Storm in offensive thriller, first double overtime game of season
SEATTLE — A week after claiming the first buzzer-beating win of the WNBA season, the Los Angeles Sparks earned the year's first double-overtime victory, outlasting the Seattle Storm 108-106 Friday in a game that featured 14 lead changes and 12 ties. It was a triumph of offensive execution for both teams in crunch time, as each made clutch shots that forced increasingly difficult responses. There were five combined baskets in the final minute of regulation and zero misses. The final minute of overtime saw a Julie Allemand drive to the basket matched by one from Skylar Diggins. Advertisement And Gabby Williams' wing 3-pointer to tie the game with 16 seconds to play — capping a five-point Seattle comeback in the second extra session — was eclipsed by a pick-and-roll finish from Dearica Hamby to seal the win. Diggins' attempt at the buzzer, one day before the star's 35th birthday, couldn't force a third overtime. The Sparks ended the game with four players scoring at least 20 points, a first in franchise history. They scored their third-most points in a game, collecting their sixth win in seven tries to move to a WNBA-best 9-6 on the road. 'Everyone just did their job,' Rickea Jackson said. 'Whatever was asked of us, we executed to the T.' Jackson led the way for L.A. with 27 points, the second-highest total of her career, but arguably the best game she has ever played at the pro level. Her box-outs helped keep the Storm off the glass, especially early, and the Sparks turned to Jackson down the stretch in regulation when they needed a score to tie the game. Her ability to duck in and overpower her defender was the advantage Seattle couldn't overcome. KP mastery. 🔥 @Kelseyplum10 x @WNBA — Los Angeles Sparks (@LASparks) August 2, 2025 Fellow L.A. sophomore Cameron Brink played in her second game since returning from an ACL injury suffered in June 2024. Still on a minutes limit, Brink played 12 minutes, registering two steals and three blocks, including a monster rejection on the All-Star Williams in the fourth quarter. Many of Brink's minutes came against Dominique Malonga, also a No. 2 pick, and the two dazzled with their defensive playmaking. Brink also chipped in five points on jump shots at the start of the quarter to help the Sparks stay in contact while Hamby and Azurá Stevens were on the bench. The Storm lost despite 37 points from former L.A. star Nneka Ogwumike and double-digit scoring outputs from three other starters. Afterwards, coach Noelle Quinn was disappointed in the officiating, particularly relating to her point guard. Although L.A. was whistled for 22 fouls compared to 21 for Seattle, Quinn said, '(Diggins) played 43 minutes and took zero free throws. It's ridiculous. Maybe I have to come up and rant and rave for us to get respect and consistency. That's all I want. Advertisement 'I'm not a coach that complains often,' Quinn added. 'But I see what happens when people come up here and do it, so now I'm about to do it. Forty-three minutes and zero free throws is bullshit. Period.' The Storm entered the game last in the league in free-throw attempts per game (15.9) compared to 22.1 for the second-place Sparks. Diggins, however, is 10th in the WNBA with 5.1 foul shots per game, though she didn't make any trips to the line Friday. Quinn also questioned the outcome of a challenge with 58 seconds to play in regulation, with Seattle up three. L.A. appeared to lose possession out of bounds, but the referees ruled the ball off the Storm and confirmed the call upon review. 'I saw with my own eyes it go off the opponent and they said there was not enough camera angles to change that call,' Quinn said. 'Again, the lack of respect, the disrespect. I can't. I know I'm young and early in my career but I work very hard and so does my team and we deserve to get refereed consistently. We deserve to get the calls that are just blatant. But there's not enough camera angles.' L.A. remains outside of playoff position despite its recent surge, now two games behind the No. 8 seed for the final playoff spot. Seattle falls into a tie with Indiana at No. 5 before the two teams face off Sunday for the second time this season.