Tablesetters: A Baseball Podcast

Tablesetters: A Baseball Podcast

Welcome to Tablesetters, the podcast where Devin and Steve bring you everything you need to know about Major League Baseball (MLB) and then some! Join these two baseball enthusiasts as they break down the latest games, analyze player performances, and serve up spicy commentary on all the MLB drama. With their witty banter and deep dive into the sport, Devin and Steve are here to satisfy your baseball cravings, whether you’re a die-hard fan or just tuning in. So grab your peanuts and Cracker Jacks, and join the conversation at Tablesetters

  1. Misiorowski vs. Sánchez for NL Cy Young, Are the White Sox & Nationals the Best Offenses in Baseball?, Acuña & Cole Return & Tarps Off Takes Over MLB | 168

    May 21

    Misiorowski vs. Sánchez for NL Cy Young, Are the White Sox & Nationals the Best Offenses in Baseball?, Acuña & Cole Return & Tarps Off Takes Over MLB | 168

    Episode 168 of Tablesetters is LIVE! We open with one of the wildest NL Cy Young races in years as Jacob Misiorowski, Cristopher Sánchez, Paul Skenes, Shohei Ohtani, and Mason Miller all build completely different cases for pitching supremacy. Misiorowski’s triple-digit velocity and historic strikeout pace are redefining what overpowering stuff looks like, while Sánchez is turning refinement, workload, and elite underlying metrics into arguably the most complete résumé in the league. From there, we get into the return of Ronald Acuña Jr. and Gerrit Cole, plus whether the White Sox and Nationals have legitimately become the best offenses in baseball. Chicago’s lineup-wide power surge, Miguel Vargas’ breakout through massive bat-speed gains, and Washington leading MLB in runs scored despite sitting around .500 all force a much bigger conversation about which offensive breakouts are actually sustainable. We also discuss the Royals’ aggressive baserunning mistakes and why Kansas City may not realistically have another offensive identity right now, Royce Lewis being sent to Triple-A for the first time in his career, and why the Mets creating a Gary Carter jersey-number controversy during Nick Morabito’s debut became such an avoidable story. Plus, Tarps Off officially becomes a baseball movement, our Sub-2 ERA crew conversation, red-hot and ice-cold players of the week, polls, debates, and everything else happening across Major League Baseball. 🎧 Listen to Episode 168 now 👍 Like the episode 📌 Subscribe so you never miss a drop 🗣️ Follow us on Instagram and X: @TablesettersPod

    1h 27m
  2. Cal Raleigh’s Freefall, Yankees Panic Meter Rising?, Ohtani Searching for Timing, Padres Defying the Numbers & Rays Taking Over the AL | 167

    May 14

    Cal Raleigh’s Freefall, Yankees Panic Meter Rising?, Ohtani Searching for Timing, Padres Defying the Numbers & Rays Taking Over the AL | 167

    Episode 167 of Tablesetters is LIVE! We open with the surprising division leaders in the West as the San Diego Padres and Athletics continue leading their divisions despite major flaws on paper. The Padres rank near the bottom of baseball offensively but keep winning close games through late heroics, while the Athletics remain atop the AL West despite a 4.45 ERA and inconsistent pitching. We discuss Jackson Merrill leading off, Nick Castellanos delivering a huge homer after borrowing a bat from Fernando Tatis Jr., and the strange state of both West divisions. From there, we dive into the shocking struggles of Cal Raleigh after his 60-homer season in 2025. Raleigh entered Tuesday with a 43-plate appearance hitless streak and one of the biggest OPS drops in baseball. We break down the hard-hit decline, timing concerns, mechanical changes, and whether fatigue from last season’s massive workload could be contributing to the collapse. We also discuss the growing noise around the New York Yankees despite their solid start. Is the 1-8 record against teams above .500 actually meaningful this early? Plus, Max Fried exits with elbow soreness, José Caballero lands on the IL, and Anthony Volpe returns to the majors after shoulder surgery. We get into MLB and the MLBPA officially beginning CBA negotiations, the growing conversation around a salary cap and floor system, and the financial imbalance highlighted by the Dodgers’ projected $550 million combined payroll and luxury tax spending. The Braves continue looking dominant, and Michael Harris II is putting together the best offensive start of his career after major swing and approach adjustments against fastballs. In “What’s the Word?” we focus on timing with Shohei Ohtani struggling through one of the worst offensive stretches of his career while the Dodgers continue searching for answers offensively. We also discuss Kyle Schwarber homering in five straight games as the Phillies continue surging under Don Mattingly, and close with the Tampa Bay Rays looking like the best team in the American League behind the resurgence of Shane McClanahan. 🎧 Listen to Episode 167 now 👍 Like the episode 📌 Subscribe so you never miss a drop 🗣️ Follow us on Instagram and X: @TablesettersPod

    1h 30m
  3. John Sterling Remembered, Skubal Shocker, Matt Olson’s MVP Run, Cubs Feel Special & the NL East Is Shifting Fast | 166

    May 7

    John Sterling Remembered, Skubal Shocker, Matt Olson’s MVP Run, Cubs Feel Special & the NL East Is Shifting Fast | 166

    Episode 166 of Tablesetters is about separation, pressure, and the early signs that some of baseball’s biggest storylines may already be changing the shape of the season. We open by remembering legendary Yankees broadcaster John Sterling, who passed away at 87 years old. From “Theeeee Yankees win!” to the unforgettable home run calls that became part of baseball history, Sterling’s voice defined generations of Yankees baseball and served as the soundtrack of summer for fans across decades. We reflect on his impact, the importance of appreciating great broadcasters while they are still here, and the overwhelming reaction from around baseball following his passing. From there, we shift into one of the biggest stories of the season so far as Tarik Skubal’s elbow surgery sends shockwaves through Detroit and the rest of the league. We break down what the injury means for the Tigers’ playoff hopes, why Detroit’s rotation suddenly looks fragile, and how this could completely reshape Skubal’s upcoming free agency. We also touch on the Astros continuing to battle injuries after Carlos Correa suffered another setback, adding even more pressure to a roster already trying to survive major absences. The Braves are forcing a much bigger conversation right now, and we dig into whether the NL East race is already starting to slip away from the Mets and Phillies. Matt Olson is playing like the best hitter in baseball, Atlanta’s offense feels terrifyingly familiar to 2023, and the Braves suddenly look like the team everyone else in the National League is chasing again. We also discuss Bryce Elder’s resurgence and why Atlanta’s hot start feels far more real than fluky. We also dive into Nick Kurtz’s strange sophomore season. The power numbers are down, the opposite-field damage has disappeared, and the strikeouts remain concerning, but the underlying metrics somehow look even better than his rookie year. Is this actually a slump, or are we watching the setup for another monster breakout? Plus, the Cubs are starting to feel legitimately dangerous after winning 13 straight games at Wrigley Field and seven overall. We break down why Craig Counsell’s group suddenly feels deeper, tougher, and more resilient than just a normal hot team, and why Wrigley is becoming a serious advantage again. Around the league, we discuss the bizarre Pirates-Reds game where Pittsburgh tied an MLB record by drawing seven straight walks in one inning, the Yankees somehow owning the best record in the American League despite getting historically poor production from the leadoff spot, and the benches-clearing tension between the Tigers and Red Sox after Framber Valdez drilled Trevor Story following back-to-back homers. 🎧 Listen to Episode 166 now 👍 Like the episode 📌 Subscribe so you never miss a drop 🗣️ Follow us on Instagram and X: @TablesettersPod

    1h 43m
  4. Apr 30

    Cora & Thomson Fired, Bazzana Debuts, Elly’s Breakout, Rays Stay Scrappy, Schlittler Looks Frontline & Mason Miller IS Human | 165

    Episode 165 of Tablesetters is about early-season pressure, real breakouts, and figuring out which April storylines have staying power. We start with the managerial shakeups in Boston and Philadelphia, where Alex Cora and Rob Thomson are both out after rough starts from teams that expected much more. The bigger story is not just that both managers were fired, but how quickly both organizations decided they could not wait for things to fix themselves. From there, we get into Travis Bazzana’s debut and what his arrival says about a loaded 2024 draft class that is already producing big league regulars. We also dig into Elly De La Cruz and whether this is just a hot stretch or the beginning of the true superstar breakout everyone has been waiting on. The Rays are also forcing a bigger conversation. Even after their six-game winning streak ended, Tampa Bay’s identity is starting to look real: scrappy, balanced, and dangerous when games get tight. Around the league, Cam Schlittler is pitching like a frontline arm for the Yankees, Trey Yesavage’s return shows why adaptability matters, and Mason Miller’s scoreless streak ending only adds more context to how dominant he has been. We also hit the red-hot and ice-cold names of the week, plus our usual debates, polls, and what we’re watching next. 🎧 Listen to Episode 165 now 👍 Like the episode 📌 Subscribe so you never miss a drop 🗣️ Follow us on Instagram and X: @TablesettersPod

    1h 46m
  5. Nico Hoerner’s MVP Case, Murakami Heating Up, Mets’ Losing Streak, Can Wheeler Spark the Phillies?, & Dodgers Depth Showing Out | 164

    Apr 23

    Nico Hoerner’s MVP Case, Murakami Heating Up, Mets’ Losing Streak, Can Wheeler Spark the Phillies?, & Dodgers Depth Showing Out | 164

    Episode 164 of Tablesetters is really about figuring out what’s actually real right now. We’re only a couple weeks in, but you can already start to see which trends are sticking and which teams are just kind of drifting without an identity. We start with the New York Mets, and this has gone way past a rough stretch. When you zoom out, the profile tells you everything. This isn’t just a team going through a cold streak, this is a lineup that isn’t creating pressure, isn’t doing damage, and isn’t giving itself any margin for error. The approach has slipped, the power isn’t there, and the at bats feel disconnected from inning to inning. That’s why the losses keep stacking the same way. They hang around early, they don’t extend anything, and eventually the structure breaks. Until the approach changes, the results aren’t going to. That conversation carries into Philadelphia, where the issue isn’t just one thing you can fix, it’s everything showing up at once. The talent is there, but the execution hasn’t been, and that’s why the results look the way they do. The difference here is there’s still belief internally that this can turn, and Zack Wheeler coming back is a big part of that. Not as a full solution, but as something that can stabilize one area and start to shift the overall rhythm of the team. From there, you get a completely different picture with the Dodgers. This is what it looks like when a lineup has depth and rhythm. Dalton Rushing and Max Muncy are driving a lot of that right now, but it’s bigger than just two players. The lineup doesn’t have a break. Guys are getting on, passing it along, and doing damage when they get their pitch. It’s not forced, it’s just consistent. And when that’s paired with steady pitching, it gives them a level of control most teams just don’t have early in the season. That same idea of control shows up individually with Nico Hoerner, and at this point, it’s fair to start asking the question. This isn’t just a hot start. It’s a player impacting the game in every way. He’s putting the ball in play constantly, producing in key spots, creating pressure on the bases, and playing elite defense. When you combine that with even a little bit of power showing up, the profile shifts. It stops being about being a solid all-around player and starts becoming something much bigger. Munetaka Murakami fits into that same conversation in a different way. He’s not easing into anything. The power is real, the patience is real, and the impact shows up immediately. There’s swing and miss in the profile, but it’s balanced by control of the zone and the ability to do damage when pitchers make mistakes. And when that balance is working, it forces the entire game to adjust to him, not the other way around. Around the league, you’re starting to see which teams are actually breaking through. Cincinnati is a good example of that shift. They’ve been winning without the offense fully showing up, and then you finally get a game where it clicks. That’s where it changes. When the baseline is already strong and the offense starts to catch up, it raises the ceiling quickly. And then you have teams like San Diego, where the identity is already clear. They’re winning with pitching, controlling games, and showing they can beat you in different ways. That’s why the question about keeping pace with the Dodgers is real. Because right now, it’s not just results, it’s how they’re getting them. The challenge is sustaining that over time, especially against a team with as much built-in margin as the Dodgers. That’s really what this episode comes back to. It’s not just who’s winning or losing. It’s who has structure, who has a plan, and who is actually showing something that can hold. And even this early, you can start to see that gap forming. 🎧 Listen to Episode 164 now 👍 Like the episode 📌 Subscribe so you never miss a drop

    1h 47m
  6. Apr 16

    Mets Offense in Freefall, Imai Can’t Adjust, Twins’ Discipline Paying Off, Rice Usage Under Fire, & Detroit Bets Big Early | 163

    Episode 163 of Tablesetters is really about figuring out what’s actually real right now. We’re only a couple weeks in, but you can already start to see which trends are sticking and which teams are just kind of drifting without an identity. We start with the New York Mets, and this is well past the point of calling it a slump. They’ve lost seven straight, they’re not scoring, and more than anything, the at bats just don’t feel connected. It’s not one issue you can point to and fix. It’s everything showing up at once. Situational hitting isn’t there, the late game approach falls apart, and the overall execution just isn’t good enough. Carlos Mendoza said it directly, they’re chasing, and you can see it play out in real time. They’re pressing, trying to fix everything with one swing instead of slowing the game down and building at bats. That’s why the reaction to Steve Cohen’s comments hit the way it did. It’s not that people don’t want optimism, it’s that it doesn’t match what’s happening on the field. The frustrating part is they’re in these games. They’re right there. But they keep losing them the exact same way, and until the approach changes, nothing else is going to. That idea of rhythm and approach carries right into Houston with Tatsuya Imai, just from a completely different angle. He basically said he hasn’t adjusted to life here yet, not just baseball but everything around it. Travel, routines, even how the day is structured. It sounds small until you connect it to performance. For a pitcher, routine is everything. When that routine is off, your body doesn’t feel right. When your body doesn’t feel right, your command goes. And that’s exactly what we’re seeing. This isn’t about ability. It’s about trying to find consistency in an environment that’s completely different from what he’s used to. And that’s what makes what the Minnesota Twins are doing stand out even more. They’ve clearly found that rhythm. They’re not just hot, they’re controlled. They’re taking pitches, getting on base, and then doing damage when they get something to hit. The power you’re seeing isn’t random, it’s coming from winning at bats first. When you watch them, the difference is obvious. There’s a plan, there’s patience, and there’s a level of consistency that a lot of teams just don’t have right now. That contrast shows up again with the Yankees, where the issue isn’t rhythm at the plate, it’s how the roster is being used. Aaron Boone says one thing publicly, but the way at bats are actually being handed out tells a different story. It’s a roster construction issue that’s already bleeding into decision making, and you can feel the frustration building because it’s not really about performance. It’s about how the pieces fit together, or in this case, how they don’t. On the mound, that same idea of control and consistency shows up in the most extreme way with Mason Miller and the San Diego Padres. This isn’t just a good stretch. It looks unfair. Late innings don’t feel competitive. Hitters aren’t adjusting because there isn’t really anything to adjust to. At this point, there’s no reason to complicate it. This is exactly what he should be doing, and it’s exactly how he should be used. The Los Angeles Dodgers are taking a different kind of approach with Edwin Díaz, and it still ties back to the same idea. It’s about being intentional. He hasn’t faced his former team yet, not because of the moment, but because they’re trying to get him right. The velocity isn’t quite there, so instead of forcing it, they’re building him back up. It’s a reminder that early in the season, some teams are reacting while others are thinking a step ahead. Detroit fits into that second group. The Detroit Tigers didn’t wait. They made a decision early on their young core and committed to it. It’s a bet on traits that tend to hold over time, and it tells you exactly how they see their future. They’re not reacting to what’s happening now, they’re planning for what they believe this is going to become. Across the league, you’re starting to see which pitchers are bringing that same level of stability, and guys like Jeffrey Springs are a good example of it. He’s not overpowering hitters, but he’s consistent, efficient, and reliable. And right now, that might matter just as much as anything else. That’s really what this episode comes back to. It’s not just who’s winning or losing. It’s who has a plan, who’s adjusting, and who’s still trying to figure it out. And even this early, you can start to see that gap forming. 🎧 Listen to Episode 162 now 👍 Like the episode 📌 Subscribe so you never miss a drop 🗣️ Share it with someone who actually watches the at bats, not just the box score

    1h 36m
  7. Apr 9

    LIVE Special!: Cade Horton Injury Shakes Cubs, Hunter Brown Hits IL, Konnor Griffin Paid, Giants Tension, & Contenders Stumble | 162

    Episode 162 of Tablesetters is a reaction-driven breakdown of a league already being shaped by injuries, volatility, and the widening gap between talent and execution. The episode opens with the impact of Cade Horton’s season-ending elbow surgery, a loss that fundamentally alters the trajectory of the Chicago Cubs. After posting a 2.67 ERA and finishing runner-up for Rookie of the Year, Horton wasn’t just productive, he was foundational. With Matthew Boyd already sidelined and Justin Steele still working back, the rotation shifts from upside to survival. The pressure now lands on Shota Imanaga and Edward Cabrera to stabilize what suddenly feels fragile. From there, the focus expands across the league, where pitching depth is already being tested. Hunter Brown hitting the IL creates immediate strain for Houston, while Cody Ponce’s knee injury adds to a growing list of issues for a Blue Jays team already stretched thin. That leads directly into early-season reality checks. Toronto’s 5–7 start reflects both injury impact and underperformance, highlighted by a losing streak, a sweep by the White Sox, and a 14–2 loss to the Dodgers that exposed issues on both sides of the ball. The offense has been top-heavy, and the pitching staff is absorbing too much too early. Meanwhile, Seattle’s 4–9 start tells a different story. The talent is there, but the execution hasn’t followed, with missed opportunities continuing to define their games. Around the league, individual moments are starting to reveal identity. A confrontation between Jorge Soler and Reynaldo López walks the line between competitive intensity and lack of control. Konnor Griffin’s nine-year extension signals Pittsburgh is betting aggressively on long-term upside. In San Francisco, early clubhouse moments under Tony Vitello are already putting a spotlight on tone, discipline, and internal response during adversity. The episode also examines which early division leaders are built on sustainable performance versus fragile margins, and which struggling teams have the profile to recover over a full season. Episode 162 centers on one idea. In a season where certainty is already proving fragile, response is everything. How teams handle pressure, injuries, and inconsistency will determine who stabilizes and who slips. Tablesetters is where roster decisions, front office thinking, and the business of winning meet. 🎧 Listen to Episode 162 now 👍 Like the episode 📌 Subscribe so you never miss a drop 🗣️ Share it with someone who actually cares about roster construction Follow @TablesettersPod on Instagram and X for clips, debates, and listener polls, and join the conversation.

    1h 31m
4.8
out of 5
26 Ratings

About

Welcome to Tablesetters, the podcast where Devin and Steve bring you everything you need to know about Major League Baseball (MLB) and then some! Join these two baseball enthusiasts as they break down the latest games, analyze player performances, and serve up spicy commentary on all the MLB drama. With their witty banter and deep dive into the sport, Devin and Steve are here to satisfy your baseball cravings, whether you’re a die-hard fan or just tuning in. So grab your peanuts and Cracker Jacks, and join the conversation at Tablesetters

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