
Unbreakable Curse? Inside MLB’s Most Shocking Postseason Droughts That Defy All Odds
Ever wonder why some baseball teams seem stuck in a never-ending saga of hope and heartbreak? MLB’s longest postseason droughts aren’t just numbers—they’re the stuff of legends, full of heroes, villains, and curses that fans retell like bedtime stories. Take the Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs, for instance: the Red Sox battled the infamous Curse of the Bambino for 86 years before shattering it with a historic comeback in 2004. Meanwhile, the Cubs endured the notorious Curse of the Billy Goat, earning the bittersweet label of “lovable losers” until they finally broke through in 2016. But these tales of longing and near-misses don’t stop there. Today, the Cleveland Guardians hold the longest World Series title drought—yet countless other franchises are on their own tortured timelines. Intrigued? Let’s dive into baseball’s darkest droughts and uncover who’s been waiting for their day in the sun… and just how long that wait’s been. LEARN MORE
For obvious reasons, this could not have been any other franchise. The Cubs went the longest without a World Series appearance (see below) or a World Series win (see above), so they could not have possibly won a series in between those years. Even after MLB introduced the wild card in 1995, the Cubs still got swept by the Braves in 1998. Finally, in 2003, the Cubs defeated the Braves in five games in the NLDS, winning their first postseason series since winning the World Series in 1908.
Forgotten are the Guardians, who were also battling a decades-long championship drought during the 2016 World Series. Despite a 3-1 series lead, Cleveland could not win that fateful fourth game and lost the series in seven. Theyâve come close before. In 1995, they lost in six games against the âTeam of the 90sâ Braves. In 1997, they lost in heartbreaking, walk-off fashion in Game 7 against the Florida Marlins. Their last World Series championship in 1948 came against the Braves â when they were still in Boston.
We looked back through Major League Baseball history to find the longest playoff droughts.
Itâs been a brutal two and a half decades for Reds fans. After their 1995 NLCS exit against the Atlanta Braves, Cincinnati didnât see a playoff game until 2010, when they were swept by the Phillies, a series that included Roy Halladay throwing the second no-hitter in playoff history. In 2012, the Reds took a 2-0 NLDS lead against the San Francisco Giants before losing three straight games and the series. Next year was the infamous âCuetoâ game at PNC Park, when Pirates fans rattled Reds starter Johnny Cueto so much that at one point, he dropped the ball while on the mound. In 2020, the Reds lost in the NLWC series to the Braves 2-0.
Ah, yes. It’s been said quite often that it’s a shame that we don’t get to see Mike Trout in the playoffs. After a nice run of six playoff appearances (including a World Series title) between 2002-09, the Angels have only reached the postseason once. That came in Trout’s fourth season in 2014 when the Angels were swept by the Kansas City Royals in the AL Division Series.
Fun fact No. 2: In their history, the Marlins have never won the NL East. Miami has clinched a wild-card berth in three seasons: 1997, 2003 and 2020. But the key difference between the Marlins and Rockies is that Miami, known at the time as the Florida Marlins, won the World Series in 1997 and 2003. Prior to the 2020 season, the Marlins were the only franchise in MLB history to win the championship each year they had reached the postseason.
Longest Active Postseason Drought
1. Los Angeles Angels, 10 Seasons (2015-Present)
Bostonâs 86-year World Series drought was filled with all the lore of a heartbreaking fable, from the Curse of the Bambino to Bill Bucknerâs error in Game 6 of the 1986 American League Championship Series to Aaron Booneâs walk-off home run in Game 7 of the 2003 ALCS. In 2004, the Red Sox broke the curse, coming back from a 3-0 series deficit against their hated rivals â the New York Yankees â in the ALCS before sweeping the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series.
Longest Active Division Title Drought
T-1. Colorado Rockies, 32 Seasons (1993-Present)
Fun fact: In their history, the Rockies have never won the NL West. Colorado has clinched a wild-card berth five times, including one that resulted in a 2007 World Series appearance. The closest the Rockies have come to winning the West was in 2018, when they forced a one-game playoff with the Los Angeles Dodgers after a late season push that included an eight-game win streak. But the Dodgers defeated the Rockies 5-2 in the tiebreaker and clinched their sixth consecutive division title.
T-1. Miami Marlins, 32 Seasons (1993-Present)
The Mariners are the only franchise in MLB history to have never appeared in the World Series. The Washington Nationals were the last team to leave this unfortunate club in 2019. Itâll happen one day, Mariners fans. We promise.
T-1. Pittsburgh Pirates, 32 Seasons (1993-Present)
Longest Active Playoff Series Win Drought
1. Cincinnati Reds, 29 Seasons (1996-Present)
The Cubsâ drought, known as the Curse of the Billy Goat, was perhaps even more infamous. While the Red Sox often came close to postseason glory, the North Siders so often fell well short, garnering the affectionate but unfortunate nickname âlovable losers.â Before they broke their own curse in 2016, the Cubs had not reached the World Series since 1945.
Longest Active LCS Drought
1. Pittsburgh Pirates, 32 Seasons (1993-Present)
MLB’s longest postseason droughts can become folk tales.
2. Cincinnati Reds, 29 Seasons (1996-Present)
Longest Active World Series Appearance Drought
1. Seattle Mariners, 48 Seasons (1977-Present)
We return once again to Cleveland, which, after getting swept by the New York Giants in the 1954 World Series, wouldnât return to postseason baseball until 1995. In fact, the team didnât even finish in second place in its own division until after MLB had split each league into three divisions ahead of the 1994 season â and that season was stopped midway through the year due to a strike by the MLB Players Association.
2. Pittsburgh Pirates, 45 Seasons (1980-Present)
From 1990-92, the Pirates made three consecutive NLCS appearances (this was still before the wild-card era). They lost all three, and then went 20 years before reaching the postseason again. From 2013-15, the Pirates clinched three wild-card berths, but only won the Wild-Card Game once (the âCuetoâ game). Pittsburgh even had a 2-1 NLDS lead on the St. Louis Cardinals that year, but lost the final two games of the series and fell short of reaching the NLCS once again. From 2013-15, the Pirates had the second-best record in baseball. They never won the NL Central, and only got out of the Wild-Card Game once.
3. Milwaukee Brewers, 42 Seasons (1983-Present)
Longest Active World Series Win Drought
1. Cleveland Guardians, 76 Seasons (1949-Present)
Fans will recount stories of heroes and villains, miracles and curses, hope and heartbreak. And no two teams embody that history quite like the Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs.
T-2. Milwaukee Brewers, 56 Seasons (1969-Present)
T-2. San Diego Padres, 56 Seasons (1969-Present)
Longest Playoff Droughts â All Time
1. St. Louis Browns, 41 Seasons (1903-43)
The post Thereâs Always Next Year: MLB’s Longest Postseason Droughts appeared first on Opta Analyst.
2. Cleveland, 40 Seasons (1955-94)
In the World Series era, no team missed the postseason more times in a row than the St. Louis Browns, who we now know as the Baltimore Orioles. In this stretch, the Browns only finished second in the American League once, in 1922, when they fell one game short of reaching the World Series. In 1944, the Browns lost to their crosstown-rival Cardinals in the World Series and did not return to the playoffs before moving to Baltimore before the 1954 season.
T-3. Oakland Athletics, 39 Seasons (1932-70)
T-3. Chicago White Sox, 39 Seasons (1920-58)
Longest Playoff Series Win Droughts â All Time
1. Chicago Cubs, 94 Seasons (1909-2002)
Now, itâs the newly named Cleveland Guardians who own the longest World Series title drought. But where do the rest of baseballâs tortured franchises fall?
2. Chicago White Sox, 87 Seasons (1918-2004)
Itâs safe to say baseball was torture for fans in the Windy City. The White Sox also ended a decades-long drought with their World Series victory in 2005. That was the same postseason in which they won a playoff series for the first time since their World Series win in 1917. However, the South Siders havenât won a playoff series since.
The Pirates used to be one of the pillars of the National League, winning three World Series titles in 20 years and appearing in four more NLCS on top of that. And while they came close from 1990-91, Pittsburgh has failed to build a consistent winner capable of breaking through that glass ceiling that shut over 40 years ago.
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