How many playoff teams should baseball have in each league? (Check comments for details)
4 | 45 (31.91%) |
5 | 13 (9.22%) |
6 | 50 (35.46%) |
7 | 2 (1.42%) |
8 | 31 (21.99%) |
I'd only be in for an expansion of the field if the regular season was reduced back to 154 games.
The playoffs play far too deep into fall as it is in northern cities without retractable roof domes. The weather itself changes the dynamic of the game.
More teams in the playoffs solves the cap problem because more teams have a shot, and would, take down bigger teams.
More revnues, happier fans.
The 162 game schedule would probably have to be shortened, which probably makes me think that this won't happen unless hell freezes over. A salary cap that distributes talent better might have the same affect, but I'd rather see bigger playoffs because it's just so much more exciting.
AL West- Seattle, Oakland, LAA, Texas, KC, Chicago, Cleveland
AL East- Toronto, Boston, NYY, Detroit, Baltimore, Tampa, Minnesota
NL West- LAN, SF, Arizona, SD, Colorado, Houston, Chicago, St. Louis
NL East- NYM, Florida, Atlanta, Phil., Pitt. Milwaukee, Washington, Cincinnati
Limited inter-divisional play (1 series home and away). No interleague play. Hard salary cap and expanded revenue sharing. Only division winners advance to the playoffs.
It's a 162 game season. Winning a division title should really mean something. None of this is likely to happen any time soon.
I'm not just speaking as a Blue Jay fan either - more teams in it = more revenue = most fan interest. I'd also like to see a hard cap, but thats another story, and not likely going to happen.
If I was an Astros or a Braves fan, I'd be a lot more interested in buying tickets when you are only 1 and 1.5 games out of the wild card respectively, than 5 and 5.5. Toronto would be 4.5 out instead of 6.5, but they'd be holding on to 7th place.
I voted four, but like Mike and Mick I would prefer two division winners per league and that's it. I like Mike's model, but would switch Minnesota and Cleveland in the AL, and would allow a little more interdivisional play. For the AL, maybe 17 games against each intradivisional rival and 10 games versus each team in the other division, and for the NL 14 games against each intradivisional rival and eight against each team in the other division. (I think my math works).
I also think if the current model continues, then the imbalanced schedule should be eliminated. As it stands, the wild card contenders have very different schedules depending on what division they are in.
Winning a division title should really mean something.
I agree, and it's part of the beauty of the 5 team system. It empasizes the importance of winning your division while keeping more teams in the race later in the season, and without requiring the regular season to be shortened. Brilliant!
I really like the 5 team set-up too, with two wild card teams (call them 4th and 5th place). Rank order the division winners by 1st, 2nd, and 3rd. I'd like to see something like this:
MONDAY - 4th place plays 5th, at 4th's home park (1 game series)
TUESDAY - 2nd place plays 3rd, at 2nd's home park (5 or 7 game series)
WEDNESDAY - 1st place plays 4th/5th winner, at 1st's home park (5 or 7 game series)
That way, you do win something for finishing in a better position.
1st - home field advantage, extra day rest, play wildcard team
2nd - home field advantage
3rd - don't have to play extra wild card game
4th - home field advantage in wild card game
5th - happy to make playoff.
You could do the same with a 2 division, 6-team playoff, with 2 wild card 1-game playoffs. I think I'd actually prefer that.
Imagine the ratings for those 1 game winner-take-all matches. They'd be huge!
I really don't like the fact that now there's no benefit to winning your division. Under this kind of system, you could allow more teams into the playoffs AND make winning your division more important.
The Jays would be considered an extremely successful franchise had they been in the AL Central all these years: they would have won titles in 2000 and 2003 for sure. And there's not that much of a reason to put them in the East: they're the farthest west geographically of the AL East teams, and the closest American League cities are in the Central (Detroit, Cleveland). Grrr.
rather a collection of over-30 free agent all-stars.
Well, not ENTIRELY ... having made appearances in the last week or so:
S. Proctor 29
C. Wang 26
A. Phillips 29
M. Cabrera 22
C. Wilson 29
R. Cano 24
N. Green 28
TJ Beam 25
Okay, maybe proving your point. Ah well.
I feel like rallying in Batter's Box Square or something.
This has been true for at least 30 years, though, except maybe for the late 80's when they were a collection of washed up over-30 free agent all-stars.
1979 YANKEES
C - Munson (32)
1B - Chambliss (30)
2B - Randolph (24)
SS - Dent (27)
3B - Nettles (34)
RF - Reggie!!! (33)
CF - Mercer (33)
RF - Piniella (35)
DH - Spencer (31)
BENCH - Rivers (30), White (35), Beniquez (29), Narron (23), Gamble (29), Stanley (31)
SP - John (36)
SP - Guidry (28)
SP - Tiant (38)
SP - Hunter (33)
SP - Figueroa (30)
RP - Gossage (27)
RP - Davis (23)
RP - Kaat (40)
RP- Clay (29)
RP - Hood (23)
Other than the young backup catcher, these guys look identical to the current Yankees, including the young 2B.
In 1979, the Yankees payroll averaged 199,236. There were 8 other teams making 66% (2/3rds) or more of that Yankee payroll (Boston, Milwaukee, California, Montreal (!), Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Cincy and Los Angeles), with 2 other teams close behind at over 60% (Texas, San Francisco).
In 1992-1993, the Jays, payroll leaders (those were the days) had 8 other teams (1992) and 11 other teams (1993) making 66% (2/3rd) or more of their payroll.
Fast forward to 2006 -- there are 0 teams making 66% or more of the Yankees payroll with the RedSox at around 60% (even less now with Abreu's and Lidle's acquisition).
Anyone that is advocating for 4 teams or less (!?!) playoffs in the AL is either a closet Yankees fan, living off their memories of the late 80s-early 90s, or is a masochist. Note that in a short series the Marlins pitching can get hot and beat the Yankees, but in a full season the rest of the AL East is playing for 2nd. And that's sad. (Note: I voted for "8" because I am a Jays fan and believe they could pull a 2003 Marlins ... if they had a hope in hell of making the playoffs).
Check out the 1979 Yankees and see how many of those guys were either signed as free agents, or acquired in salary dumps, usually from small market teams.
Out of the starting 9, only Munson and Randolph were with the team from the minors, and Randolph was originally a prospect in the Pirate system.
Chambliss and Nettles were acquired from the Indians, the smallest market team of them all at that time.
The Yankees gave up 3 players and 200 grand in cash to get Dent from the White Sox. Spencer was also picked up from the White Sox.
The Orioles couldn't afford Reggie and were about to lose him to free agency, so he was traded to the Yanks. The Yanks resigned him.
Piniella came from the small market Royals.
Murcer was a late-season pickup from a mediocre Cubs team. He was traded for a guy who would never make it out of the minors.
The Yankees have been using their massive resources to acquire players since before I was born. This is nothing new.
Do you feel it's a level playing field if the Yankees can afford to resign their homegrown stars (Jeter, Posada, Rivera) and at the same time add free agent stars? The only homegrown player I can think of that the Yankees let go (who if stayed, would have helped the team) was Pettite. The Jays and pretty much every other team lose homegrown stars like Delgado, Green and Hentgen because they can't afford to keep them. Not the Yankees. And that's the difference.
The differential doesn't necessarily matter either. Suppose you and I both want an item up for auction. If I have $12 and you have $10, I'm going to win it. If I have $200 and you have $15, I'm going to win it. The differential doesn't matter in this case, at the end of the day, you're going to go home empty handed, and I'm not.
That's been what's happening over the last 30 years. If the Yankees wanted someone, they got him, and the Royals or Expos or A's or whoever went home empty handed.
In 2006, those 8 teams have been reduced to.... zero, out of 30 teams (4 more teams = even less concentrated major league talent). Thus, the chances of some team outbidding the Yankees for some major league talent is now.... 1 in the maximum number of players allowed on the Yankees roster. As such, why is anyone surprised that the chances in 2006 are far greater that the Yankees will continually make the playoffs than in 1979, as no team has the budget to even give the Yankees a run for their money, er, free agents.
Oh yeah, and how do the Yankees keep coming up with more minor league talent to exchange in salary dumps? Because they can sign 16-year-old prospects for $2 million. And overwhelm other bidders for internationals like Matsui, Contreras, El Duque, etc., etc. Jays fans rejoice when they sign BJ Ryan *away from* the Yankees, who, if signed by them, would have been their.... setup man. Do you not see the *increasing* futility in all of this?
Other than the actual year of 1979, the Yankees did constantly make the playoffs in that time.
There's also twice as many playoff spots as there were back then, with the same number of teams in the AL. Go back to the old style playoff structure, and the Yanks don't make the playoffs in 1995, 1996 (2nd to Cleveland), 1997, 2000 (2nd to Cleveland),
In 1999, they'd win by one whole game over Cleveland. In 2001 they'd be 4 games ahead of them. In 2005 they'd have a one-game playoff with the Red Sox.
In only 4 of 11 years - 1998, 2002, 2003, and 2004 they'd be clear cut winners.
How is that any different?
While I do not favour expanding the number of playoff teams, I do support confiscating two of the NL's playoff spots and giving them to the AL!
In fact, this is exactly what they did this year when facing the BoSox in first in the AL East and the White Sox/Minny aiming for the Wilcard in the Central. I highly doubt the Yankees would have sprung for Abreu and Lidle if they were running away with the division. Case in point: look at the Mets not upgrading at the trade deadline.
I guess my argument is that it's *trending* to even more imbalance. In 2003 the Yankees gave up Soriano for A-Rod. In 2006 they didn't have to give up practically anything (at least, not anything that their scouting department can easily replace by tossing more money at raw prospects) for Abreu and Lidle.
LOL.. that's *amazing*. Awesome idea!
Giving the AL both wild cards would make a lot of sense.