|
|
#1 (permalink)
|
|
Veteran Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: NEW YORK
Posts: 670
|
Remember a few years back, MLB was looking at possibly doing another configuration?
I just made up a decent one, IMO that makes more geological sense. Here it is: American League - North East - NY Yankees NY Mets Boston Toronto DC Baltimore South - Texas Houston Atlanta Florida Tampa Bay Northwest - Seattle San Francisco Oakland Colorado National League - Midwest - Chicago Cubs Chicago White Sox Milwaukee Minnesota St. Louis Kansas City East Central - Detroit Cleveland Cincinatti Pittsburgh Philadelphia Southwest - Los Angeles Angels Los Angeles Dodgers San Diego Arizona In addition, for Interleague games, I would play two different teams from each division, once at home and once away each year. The DH rule would be done away with completely. Lastly, up the Wild card picture to include 6 teams per league. Like NFL, top two would have BYEs - Each division winner would get one spot - the remaining three would be based on overall best record after that. Thoughts? or you can do like football and have two division AL vs NL or East vs South or even North vs South
__________________
METS 07 WS CHAMPS i like how that just rolls of the tongue cant wait until that comes true |
|
|
|
|
|
#2 (permalink) |
|
Veteran Member
|
Mets and Yankees in the same division? That would make some great rivals in New York though. I don't see the Phillies going to the East Central though because they are only 100 miles or so from the coast.
__________________
Philly Sports: The worst drought in America. |
|
|
|
|
|
#4 (permalink) |
|
Veteran Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: NEW YORK
Posts: 670
|
If the MLB were to expand (although I think it's a bit stretched already), or if a team were to move, where should they move to? I'll list some cities with Major League Baseball history and some other possibilities. Some of the cities are currently probably too small/unable to support a major league baseball team.
Atlantic City - Bacharach Giants of Atlantic City Dayton, OH - Dayton Marcos Idianapolis - Indianapolis ABC's, Athletics, Clowns, and Hoosiers Columbus, OH - Columbus Buckeyes and later Turfs Toledo, OH - Toledo Tigers, Crawfords, Blue Stockings, and Maumees Birmingham, AL - Birmingham Black Barons Memphis, TN - Memphis Red Sox Nashville, TN -Nashville Elite Giants Louisville - Louisville White Sox and Black Caps (later moved to Columbus to become the Columbus Turfs), Buckeyes, Fall Citys, Grays, and Colonels Darby, PA - Hilldale Club of Darby, Pennsylvania (later called the Daisies) Harrisburg, PA - Harrisburg Giants (also parttime home of the St. Louis Stars) Newark, NJ - Newark Stars, Dodgers, Eagles, and Peppers Homestead, PA - Homestead Grays Monroe, LA - Monroe Monarchs Montgomery, AL - Montgomery Gray Sox Buffalo, NY - Buffalo Bisons, Blues, and Buffeds New Orleans, LA - parttime home of the St. Louis Stars Jacksonville, FL - Jacksonville Red Caps Portland, OR - Portland Roses Fort Wayne, IND - Fort Wayne Kekiongas Troy, NY - Troy Haymakers Rockford, IL - Rockford Forest Citys Middletown, CT - Middletown Mansfields Elizabeth, NJ - Elizabeth Resolutes Hartford, CT - Hartford Dark Blues New Haven, CT - New Haven Elm Citys Keokuk, Iowa - Keokuk Westerns Montreal, Canada - Montreal Expos Richmond, VA- Richmond Virginians Rochester, NY - Rochester Broncos and Beau Brummels Syracuse, NY - Syracuse Stars Altoona (PA, I believe) - Altoona Unions Wilmington, Delaware - Wilmington Quicksteps Other candidates: Las Vegas Anyway, I was just wondering what cities you would put a team in if you could, whether through relocation or expansion. Feel free to add a city if you'd like, or if you relocate a team tell which team should be relocated. Anyway, just curious as to what everyone thinks.
__________________
METS 07 WS CHAMPS i like how that just rolls of the tongue cant wait until that comes true |
|
|
|
|
|
#5 (permalink) |
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 50
|
Mot of the cities you have cited are very small, by the standards of Major League Baseball, or are part of other markets.
To give you some idea of what we're dealing with, the smaller city that currently has an MLB team is Milwaukee, which has a metropolitan population of 1.8 million. Almost all the cities you cited are smaller than that, and given that Milwaukee complains about its ability to support the team, it seems unlikely that places like Harrisburg are good choices for expansion. By way of comparison, Buffalo has a metro population of 1.2 million. The only cities bigger than Milwaukee I can think of that don't have teams are, Montreal (4.0 million) Vancouver (2.2 million) Charlotte (2.1 million) Portland, OR (2.1 million) Sacramento (2.0 million) San Antonio (1.9 million) The only REALLY good market is Montreal, which is understandably very soured on baseball right now; it'll take a few years and a real ownership group to restore the image of MLB in that city. Other than that, the choices are pretty marginal. The best expansion choice for baseball right now, to be honest, is probably New York City, a market of about 18,000,000 people in the metro area with an extremely high interest in baseball; the borough of Brooklyn, by itself, is larger than all the cities I listed above except Montreal. Or perhaps even a location in Mexico. |
|
|
|
|
|
#7 (permalink) |
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 50
|
The entire population of the State of Hawaii is just over a million people, with 25% having no land access to Honolulu, and it's one of the poorest states in the Union. You'd be better off putting a team in Calgary, Alberta.
Alaska has no really large cities at all. |
|
|
|
|
|
#8 (permalink) |
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 50
|
As to reconfiguration, the OP's reconfiguration is truly bizarre, placing Philadelphia - which is on the Atlantic coast and just an hour and a half from Baltimore - in the "East Central," while Toronto, which is about two hundred miles west of Philadelphia, is in the "Northeast." To continue along that line, Toronto is now further from any team in its own division than it is from Cleveland or Detroit, and seemingly unnecessarily so, since it's in a six team division. Toronto and Philly should be reversed.
You also have uneven numbers of teams in each division, meaning you must have interleague play every week. And you have leagues with one division of 4 and another of 6 teams, which is wildly unfair. |
|
|
|
|
|
#9 (permalink) |
|
Veteran Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: NEW YORK
Posts: 670
|
ya but that is how it is now we have one divison with 6 teams and another with only four.
__________________
METS 07 WS CHAMPS i like how that just rolls of the tongue cant wait until that comes true |
|
|
|
|
|
#11 (permalink) |
|
Veteran Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: NEW YORK
Posts: 670
|
That true that why if you read the playoffs coukd be changed to like the NFL or the NHL, and NBA
__________________
METS 07 WS CHAMPS i like how that just rolls of the tongue cant wait until that comes true |
|
|
|
|
|
#12 (permalink) | |
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 50
|
Quote:
I personally am a fan of the current setup, but going to 16 teams like the NBA or NHL would simply be absurd in baseball. Those sports have always had extremely liberal playoff allowances, and I would point out two things about them: 1. The NHL isn't popular, so it's not like their playoff system helps them, and 2. The NBA is a sport in which playoff seeding is extraordinarily important; it's possible, but amazingly difficult, for an 8th-ranked team to win it all. That's not true in baseball. It wouldn't be the end of the world or anything, but I don't see a lot of point in it, unless there's another increase in the number of teams, which isn't possible without some dramatic changes in the way the league is run. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#13 (permalink) |
|
Hall of Famer
|
This thing makes about as much sense as boobs on a bull
__________________
Reagan in 08... Even though he's dead, he's the better choice! Superdelegates - Because even the Democratic party knows it's base is too stupid to make really important decisions. |
|
|
|
|
|
#14 (permalink) |
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 121
|
A radical reallignment like this would seem like change just for the sake of change - in a sport that generally resists change.
Even if the playoffs were expanded as you suggest, it wouldn't be necessary or particularly productive to reallign the divisions like that. At most, I could see a minor shuffling to balance out the divisions, which would of course necessitate interleague play every week. I'd just leave the structure as is for the time being. |
|
|
|
|
|
#15 (permalink) |
|
Moderator
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Milwaukee
Posts: 6,343
|
Dude what are you smoking?
1) The New York and Chicago Teams don't like the idea of being put together and MLB wouldn't do that. 2) There are teams in both in the AL and NL that would never change League becouse of a long story history and Cleveland and Detroit are 2 of them. 3) If you could get them all to agree to it wouldn't it be more logical having a division of all 5 California teams together? 4) A division of Atlanta and the 2 Florida teams and the 2 Texas teams. That would make for some Killer Road Trips going back and forth all the time. None of them would be happy with that. 5) No more DH? hmmm, Try getting that past the Players union. Not that I would be againt geological reallignment for I would like to see it but the only way they can really make it work is with Expansion of 2 teams in the west. |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
|
|
|
LinkBack to this Thread: http://www.fanhome.com/forums/major-league-baseball/3421-theoretical-baseball-reallignment-expansion.html
|
|||
| Posted By | For | Type | Date |
| Major League Baseball: See what people are saying right now on Technorati | This thread | Refback | February 1st, 2007 02:28 AM |