MLB power rankings: The poor have become the most powerful

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How great and unexpected has this MLB season been? Well, just soak in the latest Baseball Isn't Boring power rankings and you can get an idea.

Power Rankings
Photo credit Baseball Isn't Boring

It's the middle of June and you have a top 10 that includes the Rays and Diamondbacks as the top two teams. That would be a Tampa Bay team that carries the 27th-highest payroll in MLB and a club in Arizona that sits at No. 21.

Then you go to No. 5 (the Orioles) and No. 6 (the Marlins) and you get another reminder that money isn't everything, with Baltimore sitting second-to-last in spending and Miami residing at No. 22 overall.

Yes, the list does have plenty of big spenders, with the Braves (No. 8 in spending), the Rangers (No. 9), the Yankees (No. 2), the Blue Jays (No. 7), the Dodgers (No. 5) and the Astros (No. 10) cracking producer Evan's top 10.

But that doesn't take away from the fact that this might be the most unexpected MLB power rankings on June 12 in the history of MLB power rankings on June 12.

No. 10: Houston
The case: Despite losing five of their last six, the Astros sit with the same record as the Dodgers and Marlins while still clinging to the final wild-card spot in the American League.

No. 9: Dodgers
The case: While it seems the Dodgers are taking on water thanks in large part to a rash of injuries -- putting them an unbelievable 3 1/2 games behind the Diamondbacks -- they're still ultra-talented. They also managed to break up the red-hot Phillies' win streak Saturday, which is something.

No. 8: Blue Jays
The case: You aren't going to find too many hotter teams than Toronto, which has now won 10 of its last 14 games. The Blue Jays were always perceived as one of the most talented teams in baseball, and now they're living up the billing.

No. 7: Yankees
The case: The Aaron Judge-less New Yorkers are clearly offensively challenged without their star slugger. But you aren't going to find many teams with as good as top-to-bottom pitching and defense as this version of the Yankees.

No. 6: Marlins
The case: Not only are the Marlins sitting atop the National League wild-card standings with the Dodgers, but they sit just 3 1/2 games behind the Braves for first place in the NL East. And after dramatic ninth-inning comebacks over each of the last two days, Miami is starting to seem like a team of destiny.

No. 5: Orioles
The case: They're 17 games over .500, have won four in a row and simply don't seem to be going anywhere. Oh, and Aaron Hicks is hitting .345 with a 1.058 OPS since leaving New York for Baltimore.

No. 4: Rangers
The case: Sure, perhaps they lost two of three in the big weekend showdown against the Rays, but that doesn't mean the Rangers are going anywhere. They're 18 games over .500 with an MLB-best plus-149 run differential.

No. 3: Braves
The case: Atlanta might be the most unappreciated team in baseball, and now it's getting hot. Before a loss Sunday, the Braves were riding a seven-game win streak, marking their territory against the Mets along the way.

No. 2: Diamondbacks
The case: The Fighting Lovullos have become one of the best stories in baseball. They have one of the game's best starters (Zac Gallen), one of the game's top rookies (Corbin Carroll) and a roster that actually has come to realize it's for real.

No. 1: Rays
The case: Sure, the Rays are 31-7 at home and just 17-13 on the road. So what? These guys are the best team in baseball until somebody starts proving otherwise. The Rangers had their chance this weekend and fell to the same fate as virtually every other Rays opponent this season.

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