Mason Miller has been untouchable all season. And so have the San Diego Padres lately.
Miller's scoreless streak is now at 32⅔ innings, just one shy of the Padres' franchise record. And perhaps most impressively, the best closer in the game has struck out 27 of 38 batters faced this season, his 71.1% strikeout rate the highest by a pitcher in his first 11 appearances since 1900.
But it takes a good team to give a closer a chance to shine and the Padres are just about baseball's best right now. They've won 13 of 15 to close within a half-game of the Los Angeles Dodgers — and zoom seven spots to No. 2 in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings.
At 15-7, the Padres have baseball's second-best record, thanks in large part to their closer with the wipeout fastball-slider combo that's proven untouchable. Or, as Fernando Tatis Jr. put it, "Game over."
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Miller's next task? Preserving his scoreless streak through mile-high Coors Field and Phoenix this week.
Mason Miler joined the Padres in 2025 as part of a six-player trade with the Athletics.
A look at our updated rankings:
1. Los Angeles Dodgers (-)
Nothing like Coors Field to humble a club on a 126-win pace.
2. San Diego Padres (+7)
Jackson Merrill has robbed three home runs — still impressive even if Jo Adell did that in one game.
3. New York Yankees (-1)
Cam Schlittler still taking guff from Red Sox fans, still ready to break their hearts once again.
4. Atlanta Braves (+3)
Martín Pérez DFA'd, re-signed, still dominates Phillies.
5. Milwaukee Brewers (-2)
Jacob Misiorowski with a dominant 40% whiff rate through five starts.
Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Jacob Misiorowski is leading the league with 42 strikeouts in only 26⅔ innings pitched to start the season.
6. Cincinnati Reds (+5)
Won eight of first 10 road games for first time since ... 1990 World Series championship season.
7. Pittsburgh Pirates (-1)
Mitch Keller sporting a 2.79 ERA after five starts.
8. Cleveland Guardians (-)
Parker Messick threatened, but Len Barker's perfect game is Cleveland's last no-no. Len Barker is now 70 years old.
9. Detroit Tigers (+4)
Dillon Dingler leads all major league catchers with .983 OPS, second with five home runs.
10. Arizona Diamondbacks (-)
Corbin Carroll hits grand slam one day, exits with back tightness the next.
11. Chicago Cubs (+3)
They win five in a row but let's not get too excited: Three were against the Mets.
12. Philadelphia Phillies (-8)
Zack Wheeler set to make season debut next weekend in Atlanta.
13. Seattle Mariners (-8)
Lefty Kade Anderson's first three pro starts at Class AA: 22 strikeouts, one earned run in 14 innings.
14. Miami Marlins (+4)
Kyle Stowers returns from hamstring strain, gets drilled in first plate appearance of the year.
15. Tampa Bay Rays (+4)
Owner Patrick Zalupski visits his pal Tom Ricketts in Chicago, gets some live-work-play development tips.
16. Texas Rangers (-)
Now 10-40 at T-Mobile Park since 2020. Talk about taxing.
17. Toronto Blue Jays (-2)
Kazuma Okamoto goes 59 at-bats between home runs.
18. New York Mets (-6)
If a homestand with Twins, Rockies and Nationals can't fix them...
19. Baltimore Orioles (-2)
Jeremiah Jackson and Rico Garcia are their best players right now, which is both good and bad news.
20. Athletics (-)
They depart Yolo County for a telling six-game stretch at Seattle and Texas.
21. Los Angeles Angels (+3)
An appropriate bevy of tributes for Garret Anderson.
22. Boston Red Sox (-1)
In danger of getting buried in the AL East.
23. St. Louis Cardinals (+4)
Won five of their first seven series.
24. Minnesota Twins (-1)
Still the ABS kings of the moment with 38 successful challenges.
25. San Francisco Giants (+1)
Lineup so punchless that Daniel Susac will take at-bats from .151-hitting Gold Glove catcher Patrick Bailey.
26. Houston Astros (-4)
Are they really this bad?
27. Washington Nationals (+1)
James Wood's seven homers tied for second in NL.
Washington Nationals outfielder James Wood celebrates after hitting a home run on April 12 in Milwaukee against the Brewers.
28. Kansas City Royals (-)
Salvador Perez, manager Matt Quatraro fall out briefly over "little mental breather."
29. Colorado Rockies (+1)
Consecutive wins over the Dodgers for the first time since October 2022.
30. Chicago White Sox (-1)
Munetaka Murakami doubters feeling sheepish: His eight home runs just one behind Aaron Judge.

