No matter what happens at the end of this year’s World Series, a curse is getting broken. On Tuesday, the Chicago Cubs will open up proceedings against the Cleveland Indians, and by Nov. 2, one of them will have claimed the title. For two teams with the some of the worst championship luck in all of baseball, this series will offer long-awaited catharsis for one — and even more misery for the other.
No team is ever a shoo-in to win a championship. But all else being equal, great teams should claim the title more often than merely good ones. To confirm that hypothesis, I looked at every team’s end-of-season Elo rating (a measure of team strength) and whether that team won the World Series, in every postseason era — from when two pennant-winning teams went straight from the regular season to the World Series, to the modern 10-team field that battles through multiple playoff rounds.1
As expected, a team’s probability of winning the World Series increases as its roster gets stronger. But the effect of having a good team is completely overwhelmed by the number of opponents a squad must face to get to the World Series. Consider the worst and best teams to have ever made the playoffs by Elo’s reckoning: the 2005 San Diego Padres (with a rating of 1489) and the 1906 Chicago Cubs2 (1635). In a two-team playoff system — which is what the 1906 Cubs faced — that Padres team would be expected to win the World Series only 23 percent of the time, while the Cubs had a commanding 72 percent chance of taking home the title. In the current 10-team playoff system, the Padres’ odds would shift down to 4 percent — but the 1906 Cubs would drop much more dramatically, all the way down to 28 percent.3 That’s why the modern playoffs are a crapshoot: No matter how good a team is, by the time it gets to the postseason, its chance at the championship isn’t radically better than that of the worst team in the playoffs.
As a corollary, any ballclub that appears in the postseason often enough — no matter how mediocre its teams are — should eventually be guaranteed a World Series win. But for more than a century’s worth of Cubs squads, no level of greatness has been able to get them over the hump. I determined just how unlucky each franchise has been over its postseason history by taking its Elo rating and the size of the playoff field and then calculating how likely the team was to win the Series each year using the process I outlined above. I added up those probabilities from all the years in which a World Series was held and compared them with how many titles the teams actually won, and I found that the Cubs are the unluckiest team of the last 113 years.
WORLD SERIES WINS | |||
---|---|---|---|
FRANCHISE | EXPECTED | ACTUAL | DIFFERENCE |
Chicago Cubs | 6.46 | 2 | -4.46 |
Los Angeles Dodgers | 8.16 | 6 | -2.16 |
Atlanta Braves | 4.93 | 3 | -1.93 |
Houston Astros | 1.39 | 0 | -1.39 |
Philadelphia Phillies | 3.04 | 2 | -1.04 |
Detroit Tigers | 4.86 | 4 | -0.86 |
Texas Rangers | 0.81 | 0 | -0.81 |
Cleveland Indians | 2.75 | 2 | -0.75 |
San Francisco Giants | 8.68 | 8 | -0.68 |
Baltimore Orioles | 3.63 | 3 | -0.63 |
Milwaukee Brewers | 0.62 | 0 | -0.62 |
San Diego Padres | 0.59 | 0 | -0.59 |
Los Angeles Angels | 1.52 | 1 | -0.52 |
Seattle Mariners | 0.51 | 0 | -0.51 |
Minnesota Twins | 3.45 | 3 | -0.45 |
Tampa Bay Rays | 0.45 | 0 | -0.45 |
Washington Nationals | 0.35 | 0 | -0.35 |
Colorado Rockies | 0.31 | 0 | -0.31 |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 5.27 | 5 | -0.27 |
Chicago White Sox | 2.75 | 3 | +0.25 |
New York Mets | 1.68 | 2 | +0.32 |
Kansas City Royals | 1.62 | 2 | +0.38 |
Arizona Diamondbacks | 0.59 | 1 | +0.41 |
Toronto Blue Jays | 1.49 | 2 | +0.51 |
Cincinnati Reds | 4.17 | 5 | +0.83 |
Oakland Athletics | 8.09 | 9 | +0.91 |
Miami Marlins | 0.22 | 2 | +1.78 |
Boston Red Sox | 5.35 | 8 | +2.65 |
St. Louis Cardinals | 8.02 | 11 | +2.98 |
New York Yankees | 19.23 | 27 | +7.77 |
Just based on the pretty-good teams the Cubs have featured in their 18 playoff appearances, my model expected them to win six or seven championships. Instead, they’ve only won two since 1903, and both were more than 100 years ago. (Notably, this year’s Cubs triumphed in the NLCS over the second-most-unlucky team, the Los Angeles Dodgers.) The Cubs have had more years to be unlucky than most teams, since they’ve existed for a long time. But even on a per-playoff-season basis, the Cubs have been the least fortunate franchise in baseball.
But you already knew the Cubs were unlucky. The misfortunes of the Cleveland Indians, on the other hand, had attracted far less ink before this season, despite their status as the eighth-most-unlucky franchise in the same time frame. The Indians don’t have quite the cursed reputation of the Cubs, and that’s fair. But when you consider that they’ve also been the seventh-most-unlucky team in terms of converting regular-season wins into playoff appearances since 1998, it’s easier to believe that Cleveland is hexed. (By contrast, the Cubs have been the second-luckiest team at getting into the playoffs in that same period.)
One of these franchises will see its championship drought end soon. If the baseball gods have any mercy, they’ll reward the Cubs for assembling what will probably go down as one of the best squads of all time. Yet, as a Cubs fan myself, I’ve been trained to believe that seasons can only end in heartbreak. But whether or not it ends this year, statistically speaking, the curse can’t persist forever. Probably.