There are rarely used phrases in the Kansas City Royals lexicon these days, verbiage such as "magic number" and "playoff tickets."
Cleveland fans are wrapped up in the return of LeBron James and arrival of Johnny Manziel, yet their baseball team fights to remain in the postseason race.
The Tigers are confused, wondering when their savvy and experience takes over and vaults them to another division title that was so widely expected entering the season.
"We have injuries, we've been up and down all year," Detroit outfielder Torii Hunter said. "But we can do this. We need to do this."
We're down to the final weeks of the regular season, and the American League Central has three teams with varying degrees of chances to make the postseason.
Royals
Kansas City has taken another step after finishing in third place in 2013 and has a real shot at winning its first division title since 1985. The Royals have to use cunning and guile to score at times, but their defense is excellent and they have one of the best bullpens in baseball.
"Those [bullpen] guys come out and they can make it a five-, six-inning game," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said, "plus you have some pretty good starters and they are athletic on defense. Defensively, they are the best. K.C. has some advantages. They one thing that has slowed them down is streaks. They have to start away from streaks this time of year."
Tigers
Detroit was picked by almost all prognosticators as the division favorite at the beginning of the season and led by seven games on July 24. But the Tigers' flaws have caught up with them. It is not a strong defensive team, recently committing four errors in one game. The bullpen has been an issue. And, despite trading for ace David Price and reliever Joakim Soria, the pitching staff has not been consistent and they enter Sunday looking up at the Royals.