SAN FRANCISCO -- With nearly all teams now at or past the 40-game mark, familiar names sit at the top of most leaderboards.
Major League Baseball's leader in ERA? Justin Verlander. The man well ahead of the pack in OPS? Mike Trout, of course. The current home run king? Aaron Judge, who is on track for about 60 of them in his final year before hitting the open market.
It's all very normal, and there aren't any real shocks atop the standings at this point. Here's the latest look at all 30:
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30. Reds (12-28): They're still terrible, but they're no longer historically terrible. After a nine-game skid that dropped them to 3-22, they've won or split four of their last five series.
29. Pirates (16-24): Tyler Beede has made three relief appearances for them since a waiver claim. The first two were scoreless but on Sunday he gave up four runs in two innings of a game the Pirates lost 18-4.
28. Royals (14-26): There were a lot of teams that wanted Whit Merrifield as the Royals went into a rebuild, but they held onto him for years. He currently is slashing .209/.247/.282. Oops.
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27. Nationals (14-28): Former Giants prospect Lucius Fox got his first career hit against his first team earlier this season, but the rest of it has been rough sledding. Fox was 2-for-25 to start the year and got optioned back to Triple-A earlier this month.
26. Tigers (14-26): Shoutout to old friend Derek Law, who is making a case to join the Detroit bullpen. Law has made 11 scoreless appearances for Triple-A Toledo, allowing just 11 hits in 14 1/3 innings while striking out 17.
25. Orioles (17-25): The best moment of the baseball weekend was No. 1 prospect Adley Rutschman taking a look around in his debut:
24. A's (17-26): They've struck gold with closer Dany Jimenez, who was once a Rule 5 pick of the Giants. He's allowed just one earned run in 16 appearances and has eight saves in eight opportunities.
23. Mariners (17-25): Sergio Romo is 39 years old but still sliding and sinking his way to success. He's made six appearances for the Mariners, his seventh big league team, and has allowed just one run on four hits.
22. Rockies (19-21): It's the same old story. They're 14-11 at home, 5-10 on the road.
21. Cubs (16-24): Last season's breakout has continued for Patrick Wisdom, who has nine homers in 37 games a year after slugging 28 of them in 2021.
20. Rangers (18-22): A year after hitting 45 homers, Marcus Semien is 154 at-bats into his season and still looking for his first.
19. Diamondbacks (21-22): If he keeps pitching like this, Madison Bumgarner might end up on his first All-Star team in six years. The advanced metrics aren't the best, but Bumgarner has a 2.76 ERA in nine starts.
18. Marlins (18-22): The rotation hasn't been good overall, but the top two are as good as it gets. Pablo Lopez leads the NL with a 1.57 ERA and Sandy Alcantara is down to 2.11 after a complete game Sunday.
17. Guardians (17-20): Bay Area native Steven Kwan is experiencing the ups and downs of rookie life. Kwan hit .354 in April and became a national story, but he's at .193 in May.
16. Braves (19-22): Swapping Freddie Freeman for Matt Olson hasn't exactly worked out so far for the reigning champs. Olson has a .786 OPS and four homers, well below his career norms.
15. Phillies (19-22): Jean Segura is up to 227 doubles, which means he might hit the 230 milestone when the Giants are in town next week.
14. Red Sox (19-22): Winners of eight of their last 10 in large part because Trevor Story is finally living up to his big contract. Story hit five homers and drove in 13 runs in a four-game sweep of the Mariners.
13. White Sox (21-20): Johnny Cueto is turning back the clock. In two starts, he has thrown 12 shutout innings and allowed just eight hits with 12 strikeouts.
12. Blue Jays (22-19): MLB's leader in pitching WAR? Kevin Gausman, who is well out ahead of the pack with 2.4 after starting his year with a 2.52 ERA and 1.25 FIP in eight starts. Gausman has faced 197 batters and walked just three of them.
11. Rays (24-17): Matt Wisler had a 6.05 ERA before the Giants DFA'd him last June. In 45 appearances for the Rays since he has a 2.50 ERA. Relief pitchers are hard to figure out.
10. Twins (25-16): The Taylor Rogers trade has blown up in their faces. Rogers leads the NL in saves and Chris Paddack, acquired from the Padres, had Tommy John surgery last week.
9. Giants (22-18): They had two four-game losing streaks all of last season. In the last three weeks, they have a five-game losing streak and now a four-game skid.
8. Cardinals (23-18): They called up two of their top prospects over the weekend, 22-year-olds Nolan Gorman and Matthew Liberatore. Gorman, an infielder, is off to a hot start. He had five hits in 10 at-bats in his first three games and scored four runs.
7. Brewers (26-15): The best reliever in baseball is in Milwaukee. In 15 appearances, Josh Hader has 15 saves and has yet to allow a run. He has allowed two hits and struck out 21. It's an absurd level of dominance.
6. Angels (26-17): It's no surprise that a team that employs Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani has the American League's two leaders in WAR, but it is a shock that it's Trout and Taylor Ward who are the two players.
5. Padres (27-14): The NL MVP a quarter of the way through is Manny Machado, who had his seventh three-hit game on Sunday. Machado leads the NL in average, OBP and slugging and leads the Majors with 3.0 WAR.
4. Mets (28-15): They've built an eight-game lead in the bad NL East, and it's a good thing they did. Max Scherzer strained an oblique last week and the Mets are unlikely to get him or co-ace Jacob deGrom back before the second half.
3. Astros (27-15): Mauricio Dubón has played in five games since last Saturday's trade, going 2-for-9 with a double and playing short, second and center. Judging from his Instagram, he has also enjoyed the food scene in Houston.
2. Yankees (29-12): They have three players with double-digit homers, but the real key to their hot start has been the pitching, which has been led by an unlikely ace. Nestor Cortes is a 27-year-old with a sweet mustache and a better story. After bouncing around the AL for four years, he has a 1.80 ERA and 0.89 WHIP through eight starts.
1. Dodgers (27-13): Max Muncy hasn't been the same since getting hurt the last week of 2021. He still has that great eye, but the OPS is at just .610 with three homers. On Sunday, his two-out error at second base cost the Dodgers a game in Philadelphia.