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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
One example of floating realignment, according to one insider, would work this way: Cleveland, which is rebuilding with a reduced payroll, could opt to leave the AL Central to play in the AL East. The Indians would benefit from an unbalanced schedule that would give them a total of 18 lucrative home dates against the Yankees and Red Sox instead of their current eight. A small or mid-market contender, such as Tampa Bay or Baltimore, could move to the AL Central to get a better crack at postseason play instead of continually fighting against the mega-payrolls of New York and Boston.
Divisions still would loosely follow geographic lines; no team would join a division more than two time zones outside its own, largely to protect local television rights (i.e., start times of games) and travel costs.
Floating realignment also could mean changing the number of teams in a division, teams changing leagues and interleague games throughout the season, according to several sources familiar with the committee’s discussions. It is important to remember that the committee’s talks are very preliminary and non-binding.
Like fine wine, Bud’s ideas just keep getting better as the years go by.
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And that never happens with anyone at the University of Michigan (or other colleges in Michigan), not even my best friend from college, a Buffalo native and Tiger fan with whom I watched my most recent game at Comerica Park.
Except in Michigan and maybe northwest Ohio, you can probably find more Red Sox fans in every part of America than you can find Tigers fans. The Red Sox do have an absurd advantage in geographical reach, in that sense.
Right, none of the millions of people who've moved out of Michigan in the last 30 years to places like California or Texas remain Tiger fans or go to Tiger road games. I mean, I never have. And I've certainly never seen them or heard them on TV.
And it goes without saying that no one without ties to Michigan has ever been a Tiger fan. Why would they be, when there's the Boston Red Sox?
I'd be able to cut the team payroll by 1/3 and still win the division most years. There's no Red Sox to push me to be excellent - 93 wins will get 'er done. Plus, it would really screw with the Orioles.
And Andrew's 102 was damn funny.
North American Division:
New York
Los Angeles
Mexico City
Chicago
South American Division:
Sao Paulo
Buenos Aires
Rio De Janeiro
Lima
Far East Asia Division:
Tokyo
Manila
Osaka
Hong Kong
East Asia Division:
Seoul
Beijing
Bangkok
Jakarta
Asia Division:
Guangzhou
Delhi
Shanghai
Shenzhen
Middle Eastern Division:
Cairo
Istanbul
Lagos
Tehran
European Division:
Moscow
Paris
London
Essen
Another Asia Division:
Karachi
Dhaka
Calcutta
Mumbai (Bombay)
Hey, it isn't that much more absurd than some of the proposals here.
I live to give.
I think you meant Shanghai.
Yeah, I'll have a slice of those latitudes. Cleveland 81, St. Pete 82, Detroit 83, etc. etc.
This way, the wild card is less valuable (50% lower chance of winning it all), non AL East teams have an even better chance at the playoffs in the AL, and the #1 seed gets a substantial advantage in the first round b/c they can rest and align their rotation, unlike the WC play-in winner.
In case anyone else was wondering (first and last names, Ys count):
5 Divisions, 6 teams apiece
Blue Jays (Lyle Overbay 6/11)
Orioles (Miguel Tejada 6/12)
Mariners (Ichiro Suzuki 6/12)
Cubs (Alfonso Soriano 7/14)
Yankees (Alex Rodriguez 6/13)
Marlins (Hanley Ramirez 6/13)
White Sox (Paul Konerko 5/11)
Royals (Jose Guillen 5/11)
Angels (Torii Hunter 5/11)
Giants (Aaron Rowand 5/11)
Rangers (Vladimir Guerrero 7/16)
Tigers (Magglio Ordonez 6/14)
Dodgers (Manny Ramirez 5/12)
As (Eric Chavez 4/10)
Phillies (Ryan Howard 4/10)
Padres (Yorvit Torrealba 6/15)
Indians (Grady Sizemore 5/13)
Brewers (Prince Fielder 5/13)
Twins (Jim Thome 3/8)
Nationals (Adam Dunn 3/8 or Cristian Guzman 5/14, both put them here)
Pirates (Bobby Crosby 4/11)
Braves (Troy Glaus 3/9)
Rays (Carl Crawford 3/12)
Mets (Carlos Beltran 4/13)
Reds (Scott Rolen 3/10)
Rockies (Todd Helton 3/10)
Astros (Lance Berkman 4/12)
Cardinals (Albert Pujols 4/12)
Diamondbacks (Conor Jackson 4/12)
Red Sox (JD Drew 1/6)
It does keep the Red Sox and Yankees apart, at least. Actually, I'd say the markets got spread pretty evenly across the divisions, even if the Mariners get completely hosed on travel.
But think about those Baltimore children!
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