It's October--when big league baseball and the WNBA have their big finishes, NFL football starts defining itself and the NBA knocks off the rust and tests out team changes.
The MLB playoffs are underway, but neither the San Francisco Giants nor the Pittsburgh Pirates made it that far. Both had an insufficient second half, though both had moments of fun and promise. The Pirates frustrated the Yankees at the end of the season, taking that series, and the Bucs won all the games they played against the Marlins. Their young starting pitchers are more than promising, and they have punch in the lineup. I imagine they're fun to watch at the ball park, and should be next season.
When the Giants again missed the playoffs last year they went after the two biggest free agents available in a big way, and whiffed on both of them. Those two--Judge and Ohtani--just happened to dominate the season, and may well meet in this year's World Series.
But the Giants finished the year starting to look like a team that could bring people back to the ball park. The best news is that their new leader is Buster Posey. That should at least solidify and further advance the Giants feeling like a team and not just associated statistics.
The WNBA playoffs have also started, and Caitlin Clark helped get her Indiana team into them, but they didn't win a game. She had a great year nonetheless--especially considering that she played a long college season and those playoffs into the national championship game, then almost immediately on a new team at a new level. Breaking records and earning Rookie of the Year, she also helped elevate awareness of women's basketball, while surviving all the attention and the ugliness that so-called fans and click-baiting posters unleashed. Angel Reese also had an outstanding rookie year.There's tough and skilled basketball still being played in those playoffs. Meanwhile Indiana looks forward to an even better year.
The NFL season has started, with the San Francisco 49ers underperforming, due largely to injuries, and the Pittsburgh Steelers perhaps overperforming expectations, but neither team has been consistent or appears to have much of an identity yet. To me the team that looks really solid is Minnesota.
The NBA pre-season is just starting and the Golden State Warriors have going for them the excitement of uncertainty along with potential. Klay Thompson's absence makes it a new group needing to become a team, adding new players and expecting veterans to add to their roles. Could be fun.