The biggest myths of October baseball -- debunked!

— -- People say a lot of things about the postseason. Here's one thing that I completely agree with: Anything can happen.

Everyone has tried to find a Holy Grail for predicting the playoffs. In recent years, popular explanations have focused on contact rate for offense and bullpen dominance on defense. If those are trends that continue to translate, then it's worth noting the San Francisco Giants and Boston Red Sox are the two playoff teams with strikeout rates below 20 percent. As for bullpens, of the eight teams with the lowest bullpen ERAs, seven made the playoffs, all with ERAs between 3.35 and 3.56. Only the Baltimore Orioles, however, have a closer who went 47-for-47 in save opportunities.

Meanwhile, Texas Rangers fans are convinced that the team's 36-11 record in one-run games speaks to some kind of chemistry or clutch factor that bodes well for the postseason. Well, I can tell you that none of the teams that had the best record in one-run games in the past 10 seasons won the World Series.

In this record-setting year for home runs (second-most ever hit in one season), maybe the long ball will decide the postseason. The Orioles led the majors in home runs, and the New York Mets have the most among the NL playoff teams. You probably know where I'm going: Not a good predictor for postseason success (although a couple of years ago Ben Lindbergh of Grantland examined playoff teams from 1995 to 2013 and found teams that were more reliant on the home run lost a lower percentage of their regular-season scoring than teams less reliant on the home run).

Let's examine a few other things people like to say:

How you play heading into the postseason matters

As it turns out, our past 10 World Series champs played about the same in September and in the final two weeks as they did throughout the season.

Last year's champions, the Kansas City Royals, were just 15-17 in September. The 2014 Giants were 13-12 in September and 6-9 the final two weeks. The 2012 Giants, however, were 20-10 in September and stayed hot, winning the World Series. Based on September record, I checked the hottest and coldest teams entering the playoffs from the past 10 years. The "hot" teams won two World Series (2012 Giants and 2008 Phillies) and reached another (2007 Rockies). The "cold" teams won and reached only one World Series (2006 Cardinals).

Overall, the hot teams did fare a little better, so this idea isn't completely without some merit: The hot teams went 49-42 in postseason games and the cold teams went 27-31.

The hottest team in the final month was the Red Sox at 19-10; the coldest team was the Blue Jays at 13-16.

Past 10 World Series winners

The best team wins

Another way to look at this is by comparing the playoff teams with the best record versus the playoff teams with the worst record.

The best teams have gone 64-51, a .557 winning percentage; the worst teams have gone 59-52, a .532 winning percentage. The 2014 Giants and the 2011 and 2006 Cardinals each won the World Series despite having the worst regular-season record among the teams in those postseasons. There seems to be no significant advantage for entering the playoffs as the best team -- even if you won 103 games and outscored opponents by 252 runs. It means the Mets and Giants, with 87 wins, can't be discounted.

Home-field advantage is huge

Both visiting teams won last year's wild-card games -- the Houston Astros at Yankee Stadium and the Cubs at Pittsburgh, and Madison Bumgarner, who pitches at Citi Field on Wednesday, has done this before, beating the Pirates on the road in 2014. Bumgarner was kind of a one-man road warrior that year, pitching the final five innings of Game 7 of the World Series to beat the Royals. That was the first time the road team won Game 7 of the World Series after nine consecutive defeats, however, so maybe that's still good news for the American League, which won the All-Star Game.

We've actually had few ultimate games in the LCS and World Series of late. Only two World Series in the past 13 went the distance and only one of the past 14 LCS went seven games. Let's hope for more this year.

Starting pitching wins championships

Below you can see where the past 10 World Series champs ranked in starting pitchers' WAR (via FanGraphs) and ERA among the 30 teams that season.

One more way to look at this. I checked the playoff team in each league with the best ERA each season. Here's how those teams fared in the playoffs:

Nationals League: 21-34

American League: 50-42

Teams with powerhouse rotations haven't fared particularly well. The 2008 Phillies, for example, won it all with a young Cole Hamels, an old Jamie Moyer and Joe Blanton, but couldn't win it all with Hamels, Roy Halladay and Cliff Lee. Of the 20 teams to lead their league in rotation ERA, the only World Series winner was the 2007 Red Sox.

This year's leaders: The Cubs (2.94 ERA) and Toronto Blue Jays (3.66).

Postseason experience is important

With the help of the Baseball-Reference Play Index and a trusty spreadsheet, I listed all of the playoff starts between 2006 and 2015 and broke them down into a player's first career start, second career start, third, fourth and then fifth through 10th. If experience matters, we should see some sort of improvement, right?

Wrong.

Among the memorable first career postseason starts last year: Jake Arrieta with a shutout in the wild-card game; Dallas Keuchel with six scoreless innings in his wild-card start; Jacob deGrom with seven shutout innings against the Dodgers; Lance McCullers with two runs in 6.1 innings against the Royals.

Curses exist

So yes, the Cubs are cursed. But they have some company.