October baseball starts with Tigers vs. Guardians in Cleveland.
The Guardians finished the regular season 88–74 — and went 7–3 in their final 10. The Tigers closed at 87–75, stumbling in at 2–8 down the stretch.
World Baseball Network covers the game differently — we track who’s been sharpened outside U.S. borders, whether in the World Baseball Classic, winter leagues in the Americas, or the professional circuits across Asia. International experience doesn’t just make a good headline; it shapes how rosters perform when pressure turns postseason.
Eight International Players to Watch In the MLB Wild Card Series
Tarik Skubal has been ruthless against Cleveland this year.
Tarik Skubal in 4 games against the Guardians this season:
28 Innings Pitched
0.64 ERA
40 StrikeoutsGood luck Cleveland. pic.twitter.com/C47EtMQJ10
— SleeperMLB (@SleeperMLB) September 29, 2025
He told World Baseball Network last month that representing Team USA at the 2026 WBC is on his mind, but not settled yet: “I’ve had some talks with my agent and the organization about it. You’ve got to do what’s best for me. We’ll see. I’d love to, but there are other factors that impact that for me.” Full interview here.
Cleveland counters with Gavin Williams. He went 12–5 with a 3.06 ERA and 173 strikeouts this season, and he already has postseason miles: he started Game 4 of the 2024 ALCS against the Yankees, striking out four in 2.1 innings before the bullpen had to bail him out. The talent is there; the October test is whether he can hold firm past the early frames.
Detroit brings infield power from Gleyber Torres (VEN, WBC ’23) and postseason savvy from Javier Báez (PUR, WBC ’23). Andy Ibáñez (CUBA, WBC ’23) adds contact and versatility. That’s three Tigers with direct international seasoning.
Detroit All-Star Gleyber Torres exits game at Cleveland after taking elbow to head
Cleveland matches with José Ramírez (DOM, WBC ’23) — the heartbeat of the lineup — plus Bo Naylor (CAN, WBC ’23) behind the plate. Cade Smith (CAN, WBC ’23) and Matt Festa (ITA, WBC ’23) round out a bullpen that leans heavily on tournament-tested arms. Add in Brayan Rocchio (VEN) and Gabriel Arias (VEN) in the infield, and the Guardians carry a deeper international count.
That’s the kind of construction WorldBaseball.com watches — the more passports stamped, the more angles for October play.
Playoff baseball has shifted with the pitch clock and bigger bags — stolen-base props now matter more than ever. Tempting as it is to ride José Ramírez every time, pinch runners and late-inning chaos can be just as dangerous. A single sprint can flip a series, and these international names all carry that edge.
Wenceel Pérez (DOM) +900 1 SB / +8000 2 SB
Javier Báez (PUR) +1100 1 SB / +15000 2 SB
Gleyber Torres (VEN) +1200 1 SB / +12500 2 SB
Brayan Rocchio (VEN) +1100 1 SB / +15000 2 SB
Gabriel Arias (VEN) +1200 1 SB
Ángel Martínez (DOM) +1200 1 SB
On the power side, two total bases is easier than chasing two hits — just a double does it. That’s often the smarter way to play when picking a bat.
Detroit’s dugout is heavy on U.S.-born staff, led by A.J. Hinch and Chris Fetter.
Cleveland’s staff is more global, with Sandy Alomar Jr. (PUR), Rouglas Odor (VEN), and an entire crew that leans into defense, baserunning, and small-ball. Over 162 games that can fade into the background, but in October, when one run swings a series, the international voice in a coach’s ear matters.
Tigers Safe Play (+375)
Detroit +1.5, Over 5.5 runs, Gleyber Torres 2+ total bases. Conservative, steady, and leans on the Venezuelan infielder to cash. Remember, two bases is easier than two hits — one well-struck double pays it off.
Guard Dawgs Middle Play (+835)
Guardians +2.5, Over 7 runs, José Ramírez 2+ total bases. It lets Cleveland lose but still cash if their lineup finally scratches Skubal. Risky, but not unreasonable.
Guard Dawgs Chaos Pick (+29,417)
Guardians -1.5, Over 9.5 runs, Ramírez home run, Rocchio stolen base. This is the delusional ticket. A $100 bill here doesn’t just pay, it buys you Guardians season tickets and a brand-new girlfriend.
The Tigers have the frontline ace in Skubal. The Guardians have the international depth, both on the roster and in the dugout. Odds lean Tigers, but international edges tilt Cleveland’s way. And as we remind every October: 162 games show you who teams are, but tournament baseball shows you who’s been tested beyond borders.