It's August 2021 and the San Francisco Giants are in first place. This might come as a surprise to you, if you get your sports news from the ESPN site, which seems to believe the National League consists of the LA Dodgers and...the LA Dodgers. They never feature a Giants game, unless of course they are playing the Dodgers, and then it's a Dodgers game.
I'd suggest it's a product of embarrassment that their experts never even considered the Giants as a contender this year, except the chief skill of an expert is to expertly forget--and make you forget--that they ever made a wrong pick or prediction. It's probably more that LA is Hollywood and they have all the stars. They bought a few more recently. LA and New York are the media centers, and everybody who counts works there and lives as nearby as they can afford. San Francisco is not exactly a poor cousin, and has proven itself a baseball town. But the names of their players aren't click bait.
After several years in the doldrums, the Giants started winning again this year, and even as they acquired new players, they kept winning. There are basically only three players left from their last championship year, and they are all having very good years: Buster Posey may even be having a career year, and Brandons Crawford and Belt are hitting and fielding very well. These guys experienced the heady years but I have to admire them for getting through the losing years, coming to the ball park every day and holding their heads up.
The pitching staff is new and the rest of the team is pretty young and hungry. There's a lot of platooning and pinch-hitting. There may not be big stars but the roster is pretty high quality everywhere. And the Giants are exciting again. The young Yazstremski is among those who learned their game during the lean years, joined by players acquired through trades etc., which is how the Giants built their earlier championship teams.
Pitching and fielding are strong points again but the Giants lead the league in home runs, in a decidedly not home run hitter ball park. That shocking stat alone should merit some coverage, but apparently sportswriters are so shocked they are in denial.
The Dodgers have the established stars, and so are more vulnerable to injuries. The Giants have youth with something to prove. The playoffs should be fun.