Sunday, June 19, 2011

MLB Realignment Gets Complicated


As far back as I can remember, I always wondered why the National League had two more teams than the American League. Being a fan of the Pittsburgh Pirates, a team in the NL, I hated that we were stuck in the NL Central with 6 teams and the AL West only had four. Fast forward over a decade later and Major League Baseball is now considering it.

For a lot of people, it seemed very simple, much like the math you took in 1st grade. Move one NL team to the AL, and we would have 15 in each league. That would have worked in the early 1990's before the idea of Interleague play kicked in. Now Interleague makes realignment harder than AP Calculus. Let's just say the NHL will have an easier time realigning its divisions in 2012 with the new NHL team in Winnipeg.

The league is considering a few changes with realignment. The one everyone has been looking at is moving the Houston Astros to the American League West, which would be the most simple moved to even the leagues up and give the AL West a fifth team. But interleague then becomes a problem. A system that was first introduced in 1997 is now causing problems 14 years later. If this change happens, interleague would be played well into September almost every weekend.

Other ideas included throwing out the divisions with two 15 team leagues. This idea is dumb. I don't wanna go to a game where my team is in 15th place and has not shot at a playoff spot. Divisions make baseball interesting and gets people excited and creates new rivals. Another idea that would break the hearts of traditionalist baseball fans would be ending the National and American Leagues and create three divisions in one big league. MLB East, Central and West Divisions, which would end a century old tradition in baseball.   
Another move by baseball is adding a 5th team to each leagues playoffs. Good idea, but how would you handle that? Do you have a best of 3 between 4 and 5 to see who moves on?

The easiest way to solve the problem with both leagues having 15 teams and scheduling issues is this. Get rid of Interleague baseball. It is an option, one I think that people would be open to. Since the two leagues started playing one another for the World Series in 1903, you never saw the other leagues team unless you were playing for the World Series title. The tradition of the hate for each other has died off, mainly thanks to Interleague and television, which opened NL team cities to AL teams and vice versa. Why not go back to that? I love how Boston and the NY Yankees bring in good crowds for Pirates games, but if Interleague causes the problem, it's easy to pull the plug on it.   

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