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MLB ponders realignment, moving NL team to AL (or could they possibly add 2 teams?)
cbssportsline.com ^ | 6-11-11 | By Evan Brunell

Posted on 06/11/2011 1:57:58 PM PDT by rawhide

As Major League Baseball continues to discuss possible realignment, one idea that has come up is going to a league with 15 teams per league, reports ESPN's Buster Olney.

Currently, the National League has 16 teams and the AL 14 for scheduling purposes. Should baseball go to two 15-team leagues, that would likely require interleague play every day of the season. Given baseball likes to treat interleague play as an event, that could dilute the appeal of interleague play to the point it would no longer be a moneymaker. However, there is still real resistance to the idea which has not been presented to owners yet, although the player's union is reportedly open to it.

"I'd still say the odds of it happening are less than 50-50," the source said.

CBSSports.com's Danny Knobler says that players are open to it because they are not happy about AL West teams having a 25 percent chance of making the playoffs, the NL Central just 18 percent and the rest all at 20 percent.

To switch to a 15-team alignment, one team from the NL would have to move to the AL. According to Olney, two highly-ranked executives think the Astros could receive the call in order to tap into a rivalry with the Texas Rangers. Picking the Astros would also allow baseball to remove one team from the NL Central and slot Houston into the AL West, which would address the issue of playoff percentages.


TOPICS: Sports
KEYWORDS: al; baseball; mlb; moving; nl; ponders; realignment; team; teams
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To: muir_redwoods
As a reluctantly offered compromise, remove the pitcher from the batting line-up in both leagues and dump the DH.

How do you do that? Eight batters? That's ridiculous. Let the pitchers bat. In the AL they plunk guys all the time because they know they can't get hit.

61 posted on 06/11/2011 3:05:50 PM PDT by raybbr (People who still support Obama are either a Marxist or a moron.)
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To: trumandogz

I like it.

6 divisions of 5 teams each.

Let’s see...
6 series against your own division.
2 series against teams in your league not in your division.

During intradivisional play, the odd team out would be playing the opposite league.

Say Mets vs. Phils, Nats vs. Braves, Yanks vs. Bosox, O’s vs. Jays, then Marlins would play Rays.
The next series might be Mets vs. Nats, Phils vs. Marlins,
Yanks vs. O’s, and Bosox vs. Rays. Jays would play Braves.

If you wanted to minimize travel, there would be one team in the opposite league a team would play twice (Yanks-Mets; Cubs-Chisox, etc.)

But then there would be one series left — I figure this one would rotate around the rest of the opposite league. So it would take 10 years to play every team in the opposite league.

The other option would be to not play that one team in the opposite league twice; then it would take 5 years to play every team.


62 posted on 06/11/2011 3:09:44 PM PDT by scrabblehack
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To: Falcon28
I like a 32-team league, but with an interesting twist. Baseball, more than any other sport, is ideally suited to a multi-tiered system of leagues similar to what you see in European soccer leagues. How about two eight-team "Tier I" leagues (American League and National League) and two eight-team "Tier II" leagues (American Association and National Association, or something like that).

At the end of each season, the top AL and NL teams play each other in the World Series. The last-place team in each "Tier I" league gets dropped to "Tier II" the following season, while the two teams that compete for the "Tier II" championship get promoted to the top tier.

This enables smaller cities like Pittsburgh and Kansas City to keep their big-league franchises, while at the same time putting an end to the silly notion that they can field teams that belong in the same league as the Yankees, Red Sox, Dodgers, etc. every season.

63 posted on 06/11/2011 3:11:02 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("If you touch my junk, I'm gonna have you arrested.")
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To: Alberta's Child

Never knew the soccer leagues did that in Europe? Seemed like a very strange concept, at least to me?


64 posted on 06/11/2011 3:15:06 PM PDT by rawhide
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To: rawhide

Of course the only reason the two leagues are imbalanced is they moved the Brewers from the AL to the NL about the time they added the last two expansion teams (Tampa and Arizona).


65 posted on 06/11/2011 3:15:17 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: scrabblehack
The major flaw with inter-league play is that a team's record for the season can come down to the quality of the teams they play in the other league in that year. This was illustrated some years ago (maybe in the first couple of years of inter-league play) when the New York Mets had the best record in baseball in their intra-league games, but did so poorly in their inter-league games (they played the Yankees and Red Sox six times apiece that year, if I remember correctly) that they didn't even make the playoffs.
66 posted on 06/11/2011 3:16:30 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("If you touch my junk, I'm gonna have you arrested.")
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To: Verginius Rufus

That was Bud’s big ego in play there, for he wanted his Brewers in the NL. He screwed things up!


67 posted on 06/11/2011 3:17:03 PM PDT by rawhide
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To: rawhide

That’s how they maintain fan interest in smaller cities that can’t afford to pay huge salaries on a year-in, year-out basis but can occasionally put together the right combination of good players to jump into the top tier and be competitive for a couple of seasons with the most popular teams.


68 posted on 06/11/2011 3:18:21 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("If you touch my junk, I'm gonna have you arrested.")
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To: raybbr

In all seriousness what is objectively “ridiculous” about an 8-man line up? It’s not like you’re going to have seven men on base and run out of hitters. If you get three men on base the othe five are either going to make three outs or drive at least two men in.


69 posted on 06/11/2011 3:24:03 PM PDT by muir_redwoods (Somewhere in Kenya, a village is missing an idiot)
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To: rawhide

Everyone will call me a nut job for suggesting Albuquerque, but here is my argument.
Albuquerque has been the home for the Dodgers and Marlins AAA farm club for decades. They started off as the Albuquerque Dukes, and are now the Isotopes. There has always been great attendance, and the ballpark has been redone recently. It’s a beautifull stadium and there is room to expand it for more seating. There is plenty of parking as the University of New Mexico football stadium and the famed Pit are accross the street. Albuquerque doen’t have the distraction of other proffesional teams. I believe there would be great support for an MLB team in New Mexico. You also have the potential for great rivalries already built in with the Diamondbacks, Rockies, Padres and Rangers. Albuquerque is also a very good TV market.


70 posted on 06/11/2011 3:25:37 PM PDT by sean327 (God created all men equal, then some become Marines!)
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To: buccaneer81

Portland, Oregon is the largest urban area in the US w/o a major league team.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_of_United_States_Metropolitan_Statistical_Areas


71 posted on 06/11/2011 3:29:52 PM PDT by proudpapa (Palin-West - 2012)
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To: trumandogz
"Games should be 3-2 and 1-0 games would be even better."

You just described nearly every Giants game played this year and last.

72 posted on 06/11/2011 3:31:38 PM PDT by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: rawhide
Never knew the soccer leagues did that in Europe? Seemed like a very strange concept, at least to me?

A friend who is a soccer fan says that some of the best games* of the season are when the teams near the bottom are fighting to keep from being dropped to a lower league at the end of the season, unlike last place teams here which coast through the last two months.

*"best games" for soccer still rank around paint drying for my entertainment.

73 posted on 06/11/2011 3:32:52 PM PDT by KarlInOhio (Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice! Tea Party extremism is a badge of honor.)
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To: KarlInOhio

I do not think soccer fans really care about the game, as much as getting stone-drunk and creating violence afterwards. That is the real draw in these games.


74 posted on 06/11/2011 3:34:58 PM PDT by rawhide
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To: Alberta's Child
Now that is thinking outside the box. This system would end all the griping about small market/ big market competition. Spend the money, play with the big boys. Small payroll, you compete with other small payroll teams. The only problem is the difference in how our leagues are set up. In Europe, the soccer teams are all independent clubs that come together to form a league. In the US, each team is a franchise of the overall league.
75 posted on 06/11/2011 3:37:37 PM PDT by gusty
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To: Dilbert San Diego

Noooooo, Really? Your pulling my leg right? Seattle’s ‘Go-Go you Pilots’ really went to Milwaukee To become the ‘Brew Crew’ ya say? The ‘Spos are in DC now? (Now that must be a tough ticket choice in the Capital, with the Senators there and all....now don’t tell me ‘The first in war, first in peace, but last in the American League’ Wash. Senators have moved to!!!!). Oh my.


76 posted on 06/11/2011 3:38:20 PM PDT by bobby.223
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To: bobby.223

Yea, they moved to Milwaukee. Get this, one their pitchers wrote a great book about the Pilots. Go out and get it, you’ll laugh your ass off.


77 posted on 06/11/2011 3:41:29 PM PDT by gusty
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To: proudpapa
Portland, Oregon is the largest urban area in the US w/o a major league team.

I assume you mean major league baseball.

The largest metro without a major league team in any sport is Riverside, CA.

78 posted on 06/11/2011 3:41:44 PM PDT by buccaneer81 (ECOMCON)
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To: rawhide
I do not think soccer fans really care about the game, as much as getting stone-drunk and creating violence afterwards. That is the real draw in these games.

Not in MLS. Of course, MLS is looked at as a tenth-tier league in the rest of the world.

79 posted on 06/11/2011 3:44:32 PM PDT by buccaneer81 (ECOMCON)
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To: gusty

Ha! Good one gusty! I have read ‘that book’ at the start of every MLB season opener as some sort of screwy personal tradition since I bought the first hardback printing, (in June or July 1970 iirc. His follow up books to it are well done also. The first person account of his daughters tragic death and his invite, finally, back to the Bomber’s Old Timers Day was flat out wonderful writing. The second best MLB book ever written was ‘The Glory of Their Times’ by Larry Ritter imho.


80 posted on 06/11/2011 3:50:27 PM PDT by bobby.223
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