After securing their 20th consecutive victory, the Indians look unstoppable in their march toward a second consecutive World Series appearance. In the span of just three weeks, Cleveland has thrust itself into the conversation as one of the best teams in baseball.

They may make history by setting a new record for consecutive wins by an AL team, but even if they don’t, the Indians sure look like the favorites in the American League.

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How are they doing it? The Tribe is outperforming opponents in every aspect of the game. To commemorate their 20th straight win, here are 20 stats from the Indians’ incredible win streak.

1. They have a run differential of +102 during their 20-game win streak.

To put that in perspective, only six teams (including the Indians) have a better run differential the entire 2017 season. Yet, the Tribe has outscored their opponents 134-32 during this 20-game stretch.

2. Indians pitchers have walked 34 batters total, which is 1.7 per game.

Free passes are hard to come by from the Indians’ pitching staff. They’ve been particularly stingy when it comes to walks, giving up just 34 walks total in 20 games

3. The Indians' pitchers have given up 32 earned total runs.

Runs have been difficult to come by when facing the Tribe as the Indians have surrendered only 32 earned runs during this 20-game run; the fewest earned runs in all of baseball.

4. The Indians have trailed for in four innings.

Since Aug. 24, the Tribe has played 180 innings of baseball and they’ve trailed in only four of those innings.

5. Indians pitchers are stranding 89.4 percent of baserunners.

It’s difficult enough for opposing hitters to get on base against the Indians. Even when they do manage reach base, the Indians usually leave them there.

6. Jose Ramirez has only struck out three times in 69 plate appearances.

Ramirez hasn’t drawn many walks, but the man knows how to put the ball in play.

7. Mike Clevinger has faced 69 batters and not one has scored.

Clevinger is the Indians' No. 4 starter right now, but as of late he’s pitching more like a No. 1. He’s riding a consecutive scoreless streak of 18 innings.

8. The Indians went from 4.5 games up in the AL Central to 13.5 games up.

The first three months of the season were a little contentious for the Indians, but with a 13.5 game lead over the Twins now in the AL Central the Indians have run away with the division. The Indians gained nine additional games over the Twins in just under three weeks. The Indians now own the best record in the American League at 89-56, vaulting themselves past the Astros.

9. The Indians have shut out opponents seven times in 20 games.

No runs? No chance against the Tribe.

10. Francisco Lindor: 61 total bases, Jose Ramirez: 59 total bases

Two of the driving factors behind the Indians’ late-season surge have been Lindor and Ramirez. Lindor has nine home runs during this stretch while Ramirez has eight for himself. However, Lindor narrowly edged out Ramirez in the total bases category during this 20-game win streak, 61-59.

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11. The Indians scored double-digit runs in six of their past 20 games.

To go along with their dominant pitching, the Indians’ lineup is often prone to break out for a boatload of runs. In those six double-digit run games during the streak, the Tribe has outscored opponents 68-9.

12. Carlos Carrasco: 107 batters faced, one walk

Congratulations to Miguel Cabrera; the only hitter to draw a walk against Carrasco since Aug. 22 over 107 batters.

13. Carlos Carrasco: 2 earned runs in 29 innings

Sticking with Carrasco, he’s limited opponents to just two runs since Aug. 22, thanks to an RBI double by Jose Iglesias and a two out solo home run by Adam Engel.

14. The Indians are one of only four MLB teams ever to win 20 or more consecutive games.

The 2002 A’s, the 1935 Cubs, the 1916 Giants, the 2017 Indians. With a few more Ws, the Tribe could move further up that list, but the 1916 Giants still hold the record with 26 straight wins.

15. The Indians scored first in 19 of their 20 wins.

If there’s a recipe for success for the Indians during this stretch, it’s getting on the board first. They’ve notched a run for all but one of their games in this 20-game streak. Only the Orioles scored first against the Indians back on Sept. 9. The Orioles struck first in the first inning, but the Tribe went on to win 4-2.

16. Indians batters have a collective OPS of .942.

Collectively, the Indians have been hitting at Mike Trout-like levels during their past 20 games. Their .942 OPS during the streak is a video game number from a team that’s flat-out dominated pitchers since mid-August. League-average OPS in 2017 is hovering around .753.

17. The Indians are “only” hitting .161 with the bases loaded.

Despite lackluster numbers with all bases occupied, the Indians are still managing to win ball games. They only have a mere five hits in their past 20 games with the bases loaded. However, it’s a bit of a small sample size as the Indians have only had 34 plate appearances with the bases loaded in their previous 20 games.

18. They’re as lethal at home as they are on the road.

For a team like the Indians to be this hot, one would expect there to be some swings in home/road splits, but the Tribe’s offensive numbers are nearly identical at home and on the road. At home, Indians hitters own a slash line of .307/.381/.523, compared with a road slash line of .309/.391/.579.

19. The Tribe’s pitching staff has racked up 183 strikeouts.

When your starting rotation consists of Corey Kluber, Carlos Carrasco and Trevor Bauer, expect there to be a lot of strikeouts. These three pitchers are firing on all cylinders as of late and are big contributors to the Indians’ 183 strikeouts since Aug. 24. In total, Cleveland pitchers have struck out 26.6 percent of all the batters they’ve faced over the past 20 games. Kluber, Carrasco and Bauer combined have struck out 30.3 percent of all batter’s they’ve faced during this span.

20. Indians hitters are striking out only 17 percent of the time.

Not only are Indians pitchers striking out hitters at an astronomical rate, Indians hitters are doing the opposite and striking out fewer times than any other team in MLB. The Indians 17 percent strikeout rate is the lowest of all 30 teams since Aug. 24. Overall in 2017, the Indians have the second-lowest strikeout rate in MLB at 18.6 percent.