N.Y. Yankees 74-64 2½-game lead
The wild-card favorite despite the decline of Aaron Judge, whose on-base-plus-slugging percentage at the All-Star break was 1.139 and is .707 after. The Yankees traded for slugging 3B Todd Frazier and picked up starters Sonny Gray and Jaime Garcia and relievers Tommy Kahnle and David Robertson. Now all they need to do is score a few runs, because their bullpen is superior. OF Aaron Hicks' return to the disabled list, however, doesn't help.
Wednesday: at Baltimore, ppd.
Remaining games: 14 home, nine road. Six games each against Toronto and Tampa Bay.
Twins 72-67 ½-game lead
Sellers at the trade deadline, the Twins rallied behind long-awaited offensive surges from Byron Buxton and Jorge Polanco, fueling an increased home run attack. Joe Mauer and Eddie Rosario are flirting with .300, making up for the loss of All-Star 3B Miguel Sano (shin). Taking a chance on ageless starter Bartolo Colon proved genius, but the fourth and fifth starters have been shaky. Are there many believers in this team?
Wednesday: Twins 10, Tampa Bay 6
Remaining games: 14 road, nine home. Seven games against Detroit.
L.A. Angels 72-67 ½ game behind
Los Angeles lost its entire starting rotation to injuries during the season, but a few of them are returning to health for the stretch run. Star center fielder Mike Trout missed 39 games because of a torn ligament in his thumb. Trades for Justin Upton and Brandon Phillips addressed needs. Andrelton Simmons' breakout at the plate puts him among the top shortstops in the league. Now, can the Angels protect leads? Bud Norris was the ninth-inning guy before.
Wednesday: Oakland 3, Los Angeles 1