List of National League Wild Card winners


The wild card was established for Major League Baseball's playoffs in 1994 with the intention of helping the best teams that did not win their division to still have a chance to win the World Series. The restructuring of both the National and American Leagues from two divisions each to three made it necessary to either give one team a bye in the first round of playoffs, or create the wild card for the best second-place team. In addition, the wild card guaranteed that the team with the second best record in each league would qualify for the playoffs, even if they were in the same division with the team having the best record.
Beginning in 2012, a second wild card team was added to each league. The two wild card teams in each league will face each other in a one-game playoff, the winner advancing to meet the number one seed in the Division Series.
The Colorado Rockies have been a wild-card qualifier a NL record five times, while the Philadelphia Phillies and San Diego Padres are the only NL teams to have never qualified as a wild-card.

NL wild-card qualifiers by year

As of 2015, five NL wild-card teams went on to win the World Series. Four teams won the NL pennant but lost the World Series. Four other teams won the division series but lost the championship series.
** In 2014, the Pittsburgh Pirates and the San Francisco Giants finished the season with identical records of 88–74. The Pirates, however, won the right to host the Wild Card Game based on their 4–2 regular season record against the Giants. Likewise, in 2016, the New York Mets and the San Francisco Giants finished the season with identical records of 87–75. The Mets hosted the Wild Card Game based on their 4–3 regular season record against the Giants.

Most NL wild-card appearances

Teams' NLCS records as NL wild-card qualifiers

Teams' World Series records as NL wild-card qualifiers