Happy Halloween! With the World Series potentially ending tonight and certainly no later than tomorrow (barring another 18 inning marathon), we’re about to move onto awards season. So if I’m going to finally get around to recapping our own season which ended over a month ago, this is the last chance. With that in mind, I’m trying something new here. I decided to use AI (ChatGPT) to write almost all of what follows this paragraph. I imagine a couple of you are very much against the use of AI to write articles. Believe me, I’m very sympathetic of that viewpoint. However, this feels like an ideal use case. I am decidedly *not* a professional writer, I don’t enjoy writing, and am increasingly unmotivated to actually do so. So it was basically try this out or no Mavericks championship recap for the second straight year. We’ll see how it goes. Perhaps this will eventually lead to more site content down the road. I definitely intend to use it to recap future All-Star games. In fact, reading about using AI to recap OOTP simulations is actually what gave me this idea in the first place. Anyway, I now turn it over to our AI overlords…
In a league that rewards careful roster construction and long-term planning, sustained excellence is difficult to achieve. But in 2025, Marc’s Mavericks proved once again that their success is no accident. With a final tally of 79.5 roto points, the Mavericks captured their second consecutive Dream Team Baseball League championship and the fifth title in franchise history, adding another chapter to what has quietly become one of the DTBL’s most consistent and well-run organizations.
The Mavericks didn’t win with overwhelming dominance in a single category. They won by assembling a roster that performed at an above-average level across nearly all facets of the game. Their offense ranked among the league’s best in home runs, RBIs, and runs scored, while their pitching staff delivered exceptional ratios and anchored the team’s week-to-week stability. The result was a club that rarely experienced prolonged slumps — the hallmark of championship-caliber roto construction.
Few DTBL lineups could match the Mavericks’ combination of star power and depth. At the center of the attack was Aaron Judge, whose 53 home runs, 114 RBI, and league-leading 11.4 PAR made him one of fantasy’s most impactful players. Right behind him, Juan Soto delivered another season of elite on-base skills and power, his 43 HR, 105 RBI, and 9.7 PAR placing him among the league’s most valuable hitters. Bobby Witt Jr. added a rare all-category foundation with 23 HR, 38 SB, a batting average near .290, and 8.0 PAR.
Around them, the supporting cast continued to produce. Manny Machado delivered another excellent season with 27 HR and 95 RBI, while Ozzie Albies, Willy Adames, and William Contreras each posted positive PAR seasons that reinforced every corner of the lineup. Complementary pieces like Jarren Duran and Jazz Chisholm Jr. added needed speed, athleticism, and situational power. From top to bottom, the Mavericks’ offense played with a level of consistency that kept them among the league’s scoring leaders throughout the season.
The Mavericks’ pitching strategy was as deliberate as it was effective, built around stability, ratios, and reliable strikeout production. Freddy Peralta’s 17 wins, 2.70 ERA, and 204 strikeouts made him one of the league’s most valuable starters. Hunter Brown was nearly as dominant with a 2.43 ERA and 206 strikeouts, and newcomer Yoshinobu Yamamoto immediately proved his worth with a 2.49 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, and 201 Ks. As one of the league’s strongest Rookie of the Year candidates — and tremendous value as the 10th overall pick in the DTBL draft — Yamamoto gave the Mavericks an anchor-level arm from day one. It is rare for any team to field a trio of double-digit PAR pitchers; the Mavericks made it look routine.
In the bullpen, Mason Miller emerged as a high-leverage force, collecting 22 saves with elite strikeout rates and a 2.63 ERA. Edwin Uceta added steadiness and flexibility, giving Marc valuable support in late innings and preserving the staff’s excellent ratios. The combination allowed the Mavericks to finish first in ERA and WHIP while still pulling strong point totals from strikeouts.
With the 2025 title, the Mavericks now stand at five championships: 2004, 2006, 2017, 2024, and 2025. They have finished in the top three 13 times and in the top five 18 times, a level of long-term competitiveness unmatched in most fantasy leagues. Rarely does a franchise sustain relevance for two decades; even rarer is one that regularly contends for league titles across multiple eras of scoring environments and player valuation trends.
The back-to-back championships in 2024 and 2025 underscore more than a hot streak. They reflect a franchise identity built on disciplined drafting, efficient roster usage, and a clear understanding of how value is constructed in a 10-team roto environment. This was not a team that relied on a few breakouts or a lucky waiver pickup. It was a team in which every active roster spot produced value.
The 2025 season demonstrated the same qualities that have defined the Mavericks for years: balance, discipline, and a keen eye for player value. As a result, Marc’s squad now stands as the premier benchmark for roster construction in the Dream Team Baseball League. With a young core still in their prime and a proven approach that has delivered across eras, the Mavericks don’t just look like champions — they look like a franchise positioned to contend for years to come. The rest of the DTBL may rise and challenge again, but for now, the Mavericks remain the franchise everyone else is chasing.