Sports MLB

MLB: Most Home Runs (Team)

New York Yankees
$169 Vol.
41% 3.5%
Washington Nationals
$720 Vol.
19%
Houston Astros
$624 Vol.
15.5%
Chicago White Sox
$173 Vol.
10.5%
Los Angeles Dodgers
$121 Vol.
2.6%
25 more outcomes Listed by current odds

Current odds summary

New York Yankees currently leads the MLB: Most Home Runs (Team) prediction market at 41% reported probability on Polymarket. The figures below combine live odds, liquidity, volume, and open interest so readers can compare the market signal before reading the full analysis.

Volume$564.11K Liquidity$124.08K Open Interest$1.03K Last updated9 mins ago

Odds, liquidity, volume, and open interest are sourced from Polymarket and last synced at Jul 18, 2026 4:37 pm.

CryptoSlate Market Analysis

Yankees dominance masks weak evidence behind baseball’s strangest challengers

The hierarchy concentrates heavily in four clubs, yet the supplied record contains no roster or performance evidence explaining three of them. The analytical question is whether current prices encode durable 2026 power expectations or inherited positions awaiting team-level information.

Baseball slugger launching a towering home run with a fiery ball trail inside a packed stadium under bright night lights.

The price structure points to one anchor and three unsupported challengers

The clearest thesis is that this hierarchy combines a durable Yankees anchor with prices for Washington, Houston, and the Chicago White Sox that currently lack an evidence trail in the supplied record. Those four teams account for 88.5 percentage points of quoted Yes prices, led by New York at 43.5%, Washington at 19%, Houston at 15.5%, and Chicago at 10.5%. The other 26 clubs collectively account for 38.5 points.

All 30 quotes sum to 127%, so raw prices cannot be interpreted as a clean, mutually exclusive probability distribution. A simple proportional normalization, used only as a comparison tool, reduces the Yankees to roughly 34%, Washington to 15%, Houston to 12%, and the White Sox to 8%. The ordering survives that adjustment, which means the concentration is real even though the headline percentages contain a substantial aggregate premium.

Market activity also gives limited reassurance about the hierarchy’s informational depth. Reported volume is $564,100, while open interest is only $1,040. That large gap suggests much of the recorded turnover is no longer represented by current exposure. The $103,510 liquidity figure may support activity, but the context provides no outcome-level order-book depth showing how much capital defends each individual quote.

The Yankees price assumes season-long power survives roster variance

The Yankees quote implies more than a strong projected lineup. It requires superior home-run production to persist across the entire 2026 regular season, the only period specified by the resolution criteria. That embeds assumptions about player availability, lineup depth, playing time, roster continuity, and the ability to withstand injuries or underperformance among major power contributors.

Those assumptions matter because a team home-run title depends on accumulated plate appearances across a full roster. Concentrated production can create a high ceiling while increasing sensitivity to missed games. Broader power distribution can provide resilience even if no single hitter dominates. The supplied evidence contains no 2026 roster, injury, lineup, projection, or recent-performance data, so it cannot establish which profile the Yankees will carry.

Washington and Chicago require specific baseball evidence to justify their rank

Washington’s 19% and the White Sox’s 10.5% are the hierarchy’s most demanding claims. They sit far above clubs including the Dodgers at 2.8%, Cubs at 2.6%, Guardians and Royals at 2.1%, and Mets and Padres at 2%. The record provides no transactions, prospect promotions, park changes, coaching decisions, or projection systems that explain those gaps.

The defensible conclusion is therefore narrow: the quotes encode expectations that have yet to be substantiated in the available source material. A hypothetical baseball explanation could involve multiple young hitters gaining full-season roles, major offseason power additions, or unusually favorable playing environments. A hypothetical market explanation could involve stale offers or concentrated positions. Current evidence cannot choose between those stories.

Roster decisions and live standings can replace inherited assumptions

Several concrete events would force the hierarchy to incorporate better information. Official MLB transactions involving established power hitters would directly change projected home-run opportunities. Opening Day rosters and batting-order assignments would clarify playing time. Injuries, recoveries, and minor-league promotions would alter both lineup quality and depth. Once games begin, team home-run totals, plate appearances, batted-ball results, and games missed would test whether the preseason assumptions are producing actual output.

The close date of October 11, 2026, also means the market is designed to remain open deep into the relevant season. As the remaining schedule shrinks, current totals and the number of games left should gradually dominate roster narratives. Postseason home runs do not count under the stated rule, making the regular-season endpoint the decisive boundary.

The Yankees’ margin remains the strongest counter-signal

The main counterargument to a market-structure explanation is the size of New York’s lead. Even after proportional normalization, the Yankees retain more than twice Washington’s share and nearly three times Houston’s. That separation could indicate a genuinely stronger underlying baseball consensus whose supporting research is simply absent from the supplied context.

Evidence that would strengthen that interpretation includes independent 2026 projection systems placing New York first in team home runs, confirmed lineup depth, and sustained early-season leadership. Evidence that would weaken it includes major injuries, lost playing time, roster departures, or several rivals producing comparable power across more lineup spots. Until those inputs arrive, the Yankees rank has a clearer hierarchy than a documented causal foundation, while the elevated Washington and White Sox prices carry the greatest explanatory burden.

Sources

Market details

Resolution criteria
This market will resolve according to the team that hits the most home runs during the 2026 MLB Regular Season.
Platform
Category
Sports MLB
Close date
October 11, 2026, 11:59 PM UTC
Settlement source
mlb.com
Market rules summary
Multi-outcome Polymarket event. Each listed option is represented by its Yes price on the underlying market. View full rules

Frequently asked questions

What are the current MLB: Most Home Runs (Team) odds?

Polymarket reports MLB: Most Home Runs (Team) odds with New York Yankees at 41%, Washington Nationals at 19%, Houston Astros at 15.5%, and Chicago White Sox at 10.5%. These probabilities are market-implied and can change as liquidity and trading activity update. The latest market snapshot includes $564.11K volume, $124.08K liquidity, and $1.03K open interest. CryptoSlate last synced this market data at Jul 18, 2026, 15:37 UTC.

How does the MLB: Most Home Runs (Team) prediction market resolve?

This market will resolve according to the team that hits the most home runs during the 2026 MLB Regular Season. Multi-outcome Polymarket event. Each listed option is represented by its Yes price on the underlying market. The settlement source listed for this market is mlb.com.