Banging away on the keyboard watching Opening Day action from Nationals Park. Everyone's got the same record as we start baseball's long meander into autumn. There are three other sporting enterprises where the standings are almost as tight, despite being significantly deeper into their respective seasons.
In the NBA's Western Conference, the Sacramento Kings just clinched their first playoff berth in 16 years. Denver and Memphis are also locked into the postseason. That's when it gets silly. With six or seven games left to play, depending on the team, the gap between 4th and 12th in the conference is five games. Two and a half games separate the 6th place Golden State Warriors and the 12th place Utah Jazz. The playoffs have already started.
We highlighted the crowded nature of the top of the English League Championship table back in January. One might have expected things to shake out in the two months since. And they did. A little. Burnley's (on 83 points) all but assured promotion, and a couple of teams dropped off the back of the peloton. But 12 teams will still feel like they've got a chance at going up. Sheffield United in second place (70) has hit a bit of a rocky patch, their lead over third place Middlesbrough (67) down to just three points. In 11th, Sunderland and Preston North End both sit on 53 points with eight matches to play, within hailing distance of sixth place (the last spot in the four-team playoff for the final promotion spot) Millwall (60). Chaos, firmly in our sights over the next two months.
One division higher, the stakes are different, but the tension is just as thick. In the Premier League's 30-year history, we've never seen more teams involved in a tighter relegation race as this season. A mere four points separate 12th place Crystal Palace (27) and last-place Southampton (23). It is damn near impossible to predict how this will shake out with 10/11 matches to play. According to Squawka, the three most likely clubs to go down are Southampton (78%), Bournemouth (56%), and Nottingham Forest (49.9%). Notably, that means that the stats favor West Ham to stay up, largely based upon the quality of their players. But the Hammers have been brutal (currently in 18th), and they're still alive in the UEFA Conference League, which means they'll be playing midweek matches and taxing their roster in ways the other relegation-threatened sides aren't.
Another story to watch is the fate of Everton. The Toffees have played 124 seasons in the top flight of English football, more than any other club. They haven't been relegated since 1953, the second-longest such streak, behind Arsenal's 97 season run. If they go down, it'd be a massive story.
Closer to home, our man Whit's Leicester City have scuffled throughout the season. The Foxes find themselves in 17th, just one place and one point above the drop. They have far more talent than their record would suggest, but they've also been stricken with all manner of injuries. Squawka give them an 11% chance to go down, so the odds are in their favor. But it is squeaky bum time for Leicester. And for Lester.
Not to mention fans of a bunch of teams across these three leagues. Buckle in, lads.