I did some digging on the tiebreakers rule for home field advantage in the World Series for those interested. Here is what I found (
Link)
1. Head-to-head winning percentage during the regular season.
2. Higher winning percentage in intradivision games.
3. Higher winning percentage in intraleague games.
4. Higher winning percentage in the last half of intraleague games.
5. Higher winning percentage in the last half plus one intraleague game, provided that such additional game was not between the two tied clubs. Continue to go back one intraleague game at a time until the tie has been broken.
Indians will have home field in the event we have the same record as these NL teams:
Cubs (Won head to head series)
Brewers (Won head to head series)
Dodgers (Will have a better intra-divisional record)
Rockies (Will have a better intra-divisional record)
Indians won’t win a tie breaker scenario
Cardinals (Lost head to head series)
Braves (Either by intra-divisional record or intra-league record)
(Edit - did the math after the Braves win . Indians can only at best tie division record , so Braves will win the tie breaker one way or the other)
On a side note, when they changed the rules for homefield in the World Series I thought that the best record rule applied to the LCS too , but that is not true. Meaning if the Yankees or the A’s beat Boston and the Indians beat Houston , Indians will have home field because no wildcard team can have home field over a division champion regardless of record.