Trader consensus for 2026 MLB regular season win totals heavily favors powerhouses like the Dodgers (projected 95+ wins) and Phillies, buoyed by core retention, elite prospect depth, and massive payroll commitments post-2024 World Series fallout, while rebuilders such as the White Sox and Nationals hover under 70 wins amid ongoing fire sales. Recent 2024 amateur draft hauls strengthened farm systems for contenders like the Orioles and Guardians, injecting upside via top picks like Ethan Holliday and JJ Wetherholt. Key upcoming factors include 2025 performance—regression risks for aging rotations—and the 2025-26 free agency class featuring stars like Juan Soto, alongside potential luxury tax resets and divisional realignments, all underscoring baseball's volatility where midseason trades routinely reshape trajectories.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jourYankees de New York
70%
Red Sox de Boston
39%
Blue Jays de Toronto
45%
Orioles de Baltimore
44%
Tampa Bay Rays
61%
Tigers de Detroit
38%
Royals de Kansas City
57%
Twins du Minnesota
28%
Cleveland Guardians
41%
White Sox de Chicago
49%
Mariners de Seattle
54%
Texas Rangers
38%
Astros de Houston
38%
Athletics
61%
Angels de Los Angeles
58%
Braves d'Atlanta
59%
New York Mets
41%
Phillies de Philadelphie
41%
Miami Marlins
62%
Nationals de Washington
61%
Cubs de Chicago
38%
Pittsburgh Pirates
50%
Milwaukee Brewers
42%
Reds de Cincinnati
35%
Cardinals de St. Louis
63%
Dodgers de Los Angeles
42%
Giants de San Francisco
60%
Arizona Diamondbacks
50%
Padres de San Diego
39%
Colorado Rockies
18%
$3 Vol.
Yankees de New York
70%
Red Sox de Boston
39%
Blue Jays de Toronto
45%
Orioles de Baltimore
44%
Tampa Bay Rays
61%
Tigers de Detroit
38%
Royals de Kansas City
57%
Twins du Minnesota
28%
Cleveland Guardians
41%
White Sox de Chicago
49%
Mariners de Seattle
54%
Texas Rangers
38%
Astros de Houston
38%
Athletics
61%
Angels de Los Angeles
58%
Braves d'Atlanta
59%
New York Mets
41%
Phillies de Philadelphie
41%
Miami Marlins
62%
Nationals de Washington
61%
Cubs de Chicago
38%
Pittsburgh Pirates
50%
Milwaukee Brewers
42%
Reds de Cincinnati
35%
Cardinals de St. Louis
63%
Dodgers de Los Angeles
42%
Giants de San Francisco
60%
Arizona Diamondbacks
50%
Padres de San Diego
39%
Colorado Rockies
18%
If at any point it becomes statistically impossible for the New York Yankees to record more than 86.5 wins per the rules of the MLB, the corresponding market will resolve to "U 86.5".
If the MLB Regular Season is cancelled, partially completed, or postponed after November 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to "50-50".
The resolution source will be official information from Major League Baseball (https://www.mlb.com/standings/); however a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Marché ouvert : Mar 3, 2026, 12:55 PM ET
Resolution Source
https://www.mlb.com/standings/Resolver
0x65070BE91...Resolution Source
https://www.mlb.com/standings/Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus for 2026 MLB regular season win totals heavily favors powerhouses like the Dodgers (projected 95+ wins) and Phillies, buoyed by core retention, elite prospect depth, and massive payroll commitments post-2024 World Series fallout, while rebuilders such as the White Sox and Nationals hover under 70 wins amid ongoing fire sales. Recent 2024 amateur draft hauls strengthened farm systems for contenders like the Orioles and Guardians, injecting upside via top picks like Ethan Holliday and JJ Wetherholt. Key upcoming factors include 2025 performance—regression risks for aging rotations—and the 2025-26 free agency class featuring stars like Juan Soto, alongside potential luxury tax resets and divisional realignments, all underscoring baseball's volatility where midseason trades routinely reshape trajectories.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jour
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