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October 30, 2006

A Radical Idea for Major League Baseball

Now that another World Series is in the books and a fresh five-year labor agreement has been signed, I think it's time that Major League Baseball owners do something that really shakes things up while appealing to the purists and modernists alike. I have a suggestion for a radical new alignment that would do just that, although it likely won't go over too well with the self-appointed guardians of all things baseball. This new alignment would get rid of divisions and the division series and combine some of the best aspects of the old and the new. I will outline it in the paragraphs below. 

Major League Baseball would be split into four eight-team leagues: the NL Traditional, the NL Contemporary, the AL Traditional, and the AL Contemporary.

The Traditional leagues would consist of the original eight NL franchises and the original eight AL franchises, respectively, that existed before expansion began in the 1960's. In addition, interleague play would be very limited for the teams in the Traditional leagues.

The Brewers would be assigned to the AL Contemporary. The Contemporary leagues would receive one expansion team each.

The leagues would be aligned as follows:

NL Traditional: Dodgers, Reds, Cubs, Phillies, Cardinals, Pirates, Giants, and Braves.

NL Contemporary: Padres, Nationals, Astros, Diamondbacks, Marlins, Mets, Rockies, and one expansion team.

AL Traditional: Yankees, Red Sox, Orioles, Indians, Tigers, Athletics, Twins, White Sox.

AL Contemporary: Angels, Rangers, Blue Jays, Mariners, Royals, Devil Rays, Brewers, and one expansion team.

The regular season schedules would be as follows:

NL Traditional teams would play 15-16 games against each other, six games each against NL Contemporary teams, and six interleague games against one designated AL team.

AL Traditional teams would play 15-16 games against each other, six games each against AL Contemporary teams, and six interleague games against one designated NL team.

NL Contemporary teams would play 13-14 games against each other, six games each against NL Traditional teams, six interleague games against one designated AL team, and three interleague games each against four additional AL Contemporary teams.

AL Contemporary teams would play 13-14 games against each other, six games each against AL Traditional teams, six interleague games against one designated NL team, and three interleague games each against four additional NL Contemporary teams.

A team's designated interleague opponent would remain the same each year for teams like the Yankees, who have a natural rival, but would rotate for teams like the Red Sox, who do not. Additional interleague games for Contemporary teams would be against opponents on a rotating basis.

Three All-star games would be played on consecutive nights: NL Traditional vs. NL Contemporary; AL Traditional vs. AL Contemporary; the winner on the first night vs. the winner on the second night.

Regular season ties would be broken with a best-of-three series. All post-season series would be best-of-seven. The NL Traditional champ would face off against the NL Contemporary champ, and the AL Traditional champ would meet the AL Contemporary champ, with the winners squaring off in the World Series.

Comments

I went over the top with my Perfectly Logical and Symmetrical Baseball League perhaps, but there are some similarities in our ideas!

http://the-vigil.blogspot.com/2006/04/perfectly-logical-and-symmetrical.html

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Blog Summary


  • No-holds-barred commentary (and humor) by Terry Mitchell on a variety of subjects such as current events, society and culture, politics, personal finance, technology, religion, health and well-being, sports, media issues, and trivia.

    His blog entries have been picked up or linked to by mainstream news services like Reuters, CNN, Wall Street Journal Online, USA Today, the Houston Chronicle, the Austin American-Statesman, the Dallas Morning News, the Chicago Sun Times, the Palm Beach Post, CoxOhio.com, Northwest Florida Daily News, ConsumerAffairs.com, WWL-TV, WMUR, and WNBC. In addition to his blogging, he is currently a regular columnist for etalkinghead.com and American Chronicle. He has also written over 100 feature-length articles that have appeared on numerous Web sites.

    In this blog, Terry will never miss an opportunity to assail political correctness or take pot shots at the conventional foolishness.

    In this age of information overload, Terry knows that most people don't have time to read long, rambling blog entries. Therefore, he serves up most of his posts on this blog in small, bite-size portions. You'll appreciate his cut-to-the-chase writing style that gets straight to the point without the unnecessary and boring lead-ins.

    Also, Terry makes following promises in regard to this blog that very few bloggers will make:

    1) Posts which are always family-friendly and free of profanity and vulgarity (despite this fact, this blog is never boring and never shies away from controversy).

    2) A reasonable effort to assure proper spelling, grammar, punctuation, capitalization, and sentence structure.

    Readers are free to comment, both pro and con, on any post. However, any comments that include profanity or name-calling will be promptly deleted. One who cannot defend his position on a given issue without resorting to such tactics is, at best, too ignorant to adequately defend his position, and at worst, lacking a defensible position altogether.

    For Terry's biography (in his own words), see the "ABOUT" link on the left side of this page, just below his photo.

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