Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Season 79 Q1 Power Rankings

Season 79 – Quarter Pole Edition (40 Games)

Forty games into the season, the Mantle League picture is beginning to take shape.

Some preseason predictions have proven remarkably accurate. Anaheim remains a powerhouse. Fresno has emerged as a legitimate challenger. Kansas City hasn’t missed a beat after inheriting Toledo’s 100-win core. Vancouver’s elite pitching staff has transformed the Fighting Skeletons into one of baseball’s most complete teams.

Elsewhere, the surprises have been just as compelling.

Cuba sits atop the AL East after inheriting the former Highlanders franchise. Montgomery leads a division many expected Wichita to dominate. Boston has already won nearly half as many games as it did all of last season.

And perhaps most shocking of all, preseason AL East favorite Dover owns one of the worst records in baseball.

With a quarter of the season complete, here’s how all 32 teams stack up.

Tier 1: Championship Favorites

#1 Anaheim Agitated Aardvarks (29-11)

The king remains on the throne.

Anaheim owns the league’s best record, the second-best ERA in baseball, and a remarkable 15-2 road record. The Aardvarks haven’t quite matched Fresno’s run differential, but until someone knocks them off, they remain the standard by which every contender is measured.

#2 Fresno Grizzlies (28-12)

If these rankings were based solely on underlying performance, Fresno might be number one.

The Grizzlies have outscored opponents by an astonishing 94 runs through 40 games, easily the best mark in the league. The offense ranks among baseball’s elite, the pitching staff owns a 3.61 ERA, and the roster looks every bit as dangerous as advertised.

Unfortunately for Fresno, they share a division with Anaheim.

#3 Vancouver Fighting Skeletons (27-13)

The best pitching staff in baseball earns Vancouver a place among the elite.

The Fighting Skeletons lead the league with a 2.52 ERA while allowing opponents to hit just .223. Combined with a steadily improving offense, Vancouver has established itself as the clear favorite in the NL West.

#4 Kansas City Royals (26-14)

The transition from Toledo to Kansas City has been virtually seamless.

The Royals continue to pair quality pitching with a balanced offense, and the organization remains firmly on pace to defend its NL North crown.

#5 Texas Tweakers (24-16)

The offense remains terrifying.

Texas leads the league in OPS (.864) and home runs (77), carrying the club despite a pitching staff that has been surprisingly average by championship standards. If the arms improve even slightly, the Tweakers could become even more dangerous.

Tier 2: Legitimate Contenders

#6 Salem Pitches (25-15)

Salem may be the most overlooked 25-win team in the league.

The offense ranks among the best in baseball, and a +72 run differential suggests the Pitches belong in the contender conversation despite residing in the brutal AL West.

#7 Montgomery Mules (24-16)

The biggest surprise among division leaders.

Few predicted Montgomery would be leading the NL South after 40 games, but strong pitching and timely hitting have carried the Mules to the top of a highly competitive division.

#8 Montreal Expos (23-17)

The Expos look exactly like the team many expected entering the season.

Solid pitching, quality on-base skills, and a balanced roster have positioned Montreal as Kansas City’s primary challenger in the NL North.

#9 Chicago Coyotes (22-18)

Chicago’s 15-5 road record is one of the most impressive accomplishments in baseball.

The Coyotes continue to win with consistency rather than flash and currently sit atop the tightly packed AL North.

#10 Wichita Evil Sheep (22-18)

The preseason National League favorite hasn’t quite found top gear.

Still, the underlying numbers remain strong, and Wichita remains one of the teams nobody wants to face in October.

Tier 3: Playoff Contenders

#11 Cuba Koi (22-18)

The biggest surprise in the American League.

After inheriting the former Highlanders franchise, Cuba has immediately transformed into a division leader. Whether they can stay there remains to be seen, but the first 40 games have been a massive success.

#12 Santa Fe Trail (21-19)

The aggressive offseason has paid off.

Santa Fe owns one of baseball’s best offenses and has quickly become one of the league’s most interesting success stories under new ownership.

#13 Portland Lastplace (21-19)

The name is misleading.

Strong pitching and solid execution have Portland firmly in the NL playoff race despite modest offensive production.

#14 Boise Renegades (21-19)

The record is respectable, but expectations were higher.

After an aggressive offseason, Boise remains firmly in the playoff hunt but has yet to make the leap many expected.

#15 Austin Celtics (22-18)

The Celtics may be the league’s toughest team to evaluate.

Austin owns a winning record despite being nearly even in run differential (-2). While the underlying metrics suggest a team closer to .500 than contender status, the standings still matter. Through 40 games, Austin has consistently found ways to win close games and remains firmly in the playoff conversation.

#16 Chicago Iveys (20-20)

The offseason spending spree appears to be paying off.

The Iveys sit atop the NL East and have shown noticeable improvement from last year’s 74-win club.

#17 Seattle Run (20-20)

No team has a larger gap between its offense and pitching.

Seattle owns one of the league’s best pitching staffs and one of its worst offenses. If the bats wake up, this team becomes dangerous.

#18 Minnesota Lakers (19-21)

The defending AL North champions haven’t found consistency, but they’re still very much alive in a division where nobody has separated from the pack.

#19 New York Metros (19-21)

The defending NL East champions have underperformed, but the division remains so tightly packed that New York is still just one hot streak away from first place.

Tier 4: Hanging Around

#20 Boston Bruisers (18-22)

After going 38-124 last season, simply being competitive represents enormous progress.

Boston has already demonstrated more fight in 40 games than it showed for most of last season.

#21 Cincinnati Hawk Tuah (18-22)

The Hawk Tuah remain exactly what they’ve always been: competitive enough to stay relevant, but still searching for another gear.

#22 Norfolk Tides (18-22)

The offense has been respectable, but the pitching staff’s 5.12 ERA continues to limit Norfolk’s ceiling.

#23 Philadelphia AllStarIncs (18-22)

Philadelphia can hit.

Unfortunately, preventing runs has proven far more difficult.

#24 Toronto Yankdawgs (18-22)

Toronto remains within striking distance, but the offense has struggled too often to seriously threaten Kansas City or Montreal.

#25 Columbus Clippers (17-23)

The NL East keeps everyone relevant.

Columbus remains only a few games out despite some concerning underlying numbers.

#26 Jacksonville DEPLORABLES (16-24)

Better than the record suggests, but not good enough yet.

The DEPLORABLES continue searching for consistency in a difficult NL South.

Tier 5: Major Disappointments

#27 Charleston Mezcals (16-24)

After an active offseason and a franchise rebrand, Charleston expected to contend.

Instead, one of the league’s worst pitching staffs has left the Mezcals fighting an uphill battle.

#28 New Orleans Voodoo (14-26)

A year after winning 86 games, the Voodoo have taken one of the league’s largest steps backward.

#29 Washington D.C. Senators (14-26)

The offense has actually been respectable.

The pitching staff has not.

Washington has allowed a league-worst 265 runs despite ranking near the middle of the league offensively.

#30 Dover Gulls (13-27)

No team has fallen further.

The preseason AL East favorite has seen both its offense and pitching regress dramatically, turning a projected contender into one of baseball’s biggest disappointments.

#31 Milwaukee Lagers (14-26)

The rebuild continues, but meaningful progress remains difficult to find.

#32 Colorado Mountain High (11-29)

The offense isn’t terrible.

The pitching staff owns a staggering 7.66 ERA and has already surrendered 307 runs. Until that changes, Colorado will remain anchored to the bottom of the rankings.

Biggest Surprises

  • Cuba Koi leading the AL East.
  • Montgomery leading the NL South.
  • Boston becoming competitive again.
  • Portland remaining firmly in the playoff race.

Biggest Disappointments

  • Dover Gulls
  • Charleston Mezcals
  • New Orleans Voodoo
  • New York Metros

Quarter-Pole Awards

Best Team: Anaheim Agitated Aardvarks

Best Statistical Profile: Fresno Grizzlies

Best Pitching Staff: Vancouver Fighting Skeletons

Best Offense: Texas Tweakers

Biggest Surprise: Cuba Koi

Biggest Disappointment: Dover Gulls

Final Thought

Forty games into Season 79, the race for the Mantle League championship appears deeper than ever.

Anaheim, Fresno, Vancouver, Kansas City, and Texas have established themselves as the league’s elite. Behind them sits a massive group of teams separated by only a handful of games, each believing it can make a second-half run.

The next 40 games will determine whether the surprises are real, whether the disappointments can recover, and whether anyone can catch the giants at the top.

For now, Anaheim remains the standard.

Monday, June 8, 2026

Season 79 Preview

Things have been busy for me, but I have been using AI more at home and at work.  Thus I thought, how about I let ChatGPT put together a season preview based on last season's standings and current rosters/free agent additions.  

Mantle League Season 79 Preview

New Faces, Old Powers, and a League Ready to Explode

For 78 seasons, the Mantle League has rewarded stability, patience, and smart roster construction. Season 79 may test all three.

The league enters the new year at a fascinating crossroads. The established superpowers remain loaded, several playoff-caliber clubs are pushing aggressively toward contention, and a wave of franchise turnover could reshape the competitive landscape far sooner than expected.

Last season produced two 108+ win monsters in the American League, a 100-win powerhouse in the National League, and perhaps the deepest collection of middle-tier contenders the league has seen in years. This offseason only intensified the competition. Across the league, contenders opened their wallets, rebuilding clubs accelerated their timelines, and new ownership groups immediately began reshaping their franchises.

And in Hardball Dynasty, that usually means chaos.


The State of the League

At the highest level, Mantle currently feels split into three tiers:

Tier 1: The Giants

  • Anaheim Agitated Aardvarks

  • Texas Tweakers

  • Kansas City Royals (formerly Toledo Freight Depot)

  • Wichita Evil Sheep

  • Fresno Grizzlies

Tier 2: Dangerous Contenders

  • Dover Gulls

  • Vancouver Fighting Skeletons

  • Salem Pitches

  • Minnesota Lakers

  • Montreal Expos

  • Charleston Mezcals

Tier 3: The Wild Cards

A massive collection of teams hovering between 75 and 88 wins — close enough to dream about October, but flawed enough to collapse if injuries hit.

What makes Season 79 unique is how many of those middle-tier clubs chose aggression over patience this winter.


Franchise Changes Bring New Energy

Several organizations enter Season 79 under new ownership or identities:

  • New York Highlanders → Cuba Koi

  • Kansas City Masterpieces → Charleston Mezcals

  • El Paso Knights → Santa Fe Trail

  • Toledo Freight Depot → Kansas City Royals

The Royals situation is especially fascinating.

Toledo dominated the NL North with 100 wins last season, but ownership changes often create uncertainty. Whether Kansas City continues operating as a win-now powerhouse or begins making long-term adjustments could become one of the defining stories of the season.


American League Preview

The AL Still Runs Through Anaheim and Texas

The Anaheim Agitated Aardvarks and Texas Tweakers were historically dominant in Season 78.

Anaheim finished 109-53.
Texas finished 108-54.

Both clubs posted identical 59-22 road records. Both demonstrated elite organizational depth. Both appear loaded once again entering Season 79.

What's even more concerning for the rest of the league is that Anaheim appears to have improved. The addition of Pete Curtis gives an already loaded roster even more depth and reinforces Anaheim's status as the team to beat.

Texas remains just as dangerous. The Tweakers continue to feature one of the league's deepest lineups and most complete rosters.

The scary part?

Neither organization appears ready to take a step backward.


Dover Is Quietly Becoming a Serious AL Threat

Dover's 91-win season somehow flew under the radar last year, but the front office doesn't appear interested in remaining overlooked.

The signing of Aroldis Marin was one of the most important moves of the offseason and immediately strengthens an already impressive pitching staff. The Gulls already looked positioned to control the AL East entering Season 79. Their offseason activity only strengthens that projection.

For years, conversations about the AL have begun and ended with Anaheim and Texas.

Dover may be forcing its way into that discussion.


Fresno Is Baseball's Best "Second Favorite"

It feels almost unfair that a 97-win team entered the offseason overshadowed.

But that's life in the AL West.

Fresno quietly built one of the league's strongest rosters, and the ratings back it up. The Grizzlies possess high-end talent, balance throughout the lineup, and enough pitching depth to survive a full six-month season.

If Anaheim slips even slightly, Fresno is fully capable of winning 95+ games again and taking control of the division.

And if they reach October healthy, they may be the most dangerous matchup in the league.


Salem and Minnesota Look Built to Overachieve

Salem won 89 games last season and still feels underrated entering Season 79.

The roster grades out well across multiple categories, particularly organizational depth. They may lack Anaheim's superstar ceiling, but few teams are as structurally sound from top to bottom.

Minnesota finds itself in a similar situation.

The Lakers narrowly captured the AL North with 86 wins and appear capable of sustaining contention thanks to a balanced roster construction philosophy.


The AL South Could Become Chaos

Texas remains the overwhelming favorite, but the division underneath them suddenly looks fascinating.

Charleston enters after an 87-win season under its former Kansas City identity and immediately attacked free agency, adding Charles Carter and Daniel Sasser. New owner CamdenGhost appears intent on competing right away.

Santa Fe took a similar approach. After finishing Season 78 on a seven-game winning streak, the former El Paso franchise added Ivy Bass, Graham Ross, and Henry Yearwood rather than beginning a rebuild.

The division probably belongs to Texas.

But the Wild Card race absolutely does not.


National League Preview

Wichita May Be the NL's Most Complete Team

The Wichita Evil Sheep won 96 games last season, but their underlying roster quality suggests they may actually be better entering Season 79.

The organization grades exceptionally well across nearly every area:

  • Lineup balance

  • Athleticism

  • Pitching depth

  • Organizational consistency

Unlike some contenders that rely heavily on aging stars, Wichita appears positioned for sustained success.

There may not be a safer pick in the National League.


Kansas City's Ceiling Is Massive

The former Toledo Freight Depot were dominant last season:

  • 100 wins

  • +38 division margin

  • One of the league's strongest home records

Now the franchise enters a new era as the Kansas City Royals.

The talent remains obvious. The roster remains loaded. But ownership transitions always create uncertainty.

If Kansas City maintains continuity, they may still be the National League favorite.

If not, Montreal will be waiting.


Boise and Chicago Could Be This Year's Risers

No teams were more aggressive this offseason than Boise and Chicago.

Boise added Marc Garland, Nelson Hall, and Fritz Gilbert in an effort to challenge Vancouver in the NL West.

Chicago responded by adding Nicky Vance, John Knott, Stu Hatchell, and Bob Williams after a disappointing 74-win season.

Neither club entered the offseason as a favorite.

Both leave it looking far more dangerous.


Montreal and Vancouver Are Lurking

Montreal's ratings profile is stronger than its 85-win record suggests.

Meanwhile, Vancouver may have the most quietly impressive roster in the league and looks fully capable of defending its NL West crown.

Both organizations appear positioned to capitalize if one of the league's elite clubs stumbles.


Teams Facing Pressure

New York Metros

Winning the NL East at 90-72 was impressive. Repeating may be harder as rivals continue to improve.

Boston Bruisers

After a brutal 38-124 season, Boston chose aggression over patience, adding Vladimir Martinez, Jose Arias, and Brian Snell in an effort to accelerate its rebuild.

Cuba Koi

Formerly the Highlanders, Cuba begins a completely new chapter. The addition of Mark Kim gives the franchise at least one notable building block as it attempts to establish a new identity.


Early Season 79 Predictions

American League Division Winners

  • Minnesota Lakers

  • Dover Gulls

  • Texas Tweakers

  • Anaheim Agitated Aardvarks

American League Wild Cards

  • Fresno Grizzlies

  • Salem Pitches

National League Division Winners

  • Kansas City Royals

  • New York Metros

  • Wichita Evil Sheep

  • Vancouver Fighting Skeletons

National League Wild Cards

  • Montreal Expos

  • Boise Renegades


World Series Favorites

  1. Anaheim Agitated Aardvarks

  2. Texas Tweakers

  3. Wichita Evil Sheep

  4. Kansas City Royals

  5. Dover Gulls


Final Thought

Season 79 feels like the beginning of a transition era.

The superpowers remain dominant. But beneath them, the league is changing rapidly. New ownership groups, relocations, aggressive free-agent spending, and emerging contenders have created far more volatility than the standings alone might suggest.

For now, Anaheim and Texas still own the American League.

Wichita and Kansas City may control the National League.

But the gap is shrinking.

And in Mantle League history, that's usually when chaos begins.

Season 79 Q1 Power Rankings

Season 79 – Quarter Pole Edition (40 Games) Forty games into the season, the Mantle League picture is beginning to take shape. Some pres...