The game of baseball is rich in history and luster, but in the last two decades or so, the game has fallen out of favor in many baseball cities.
Ever since the players strike in 1994, baseball moved into the "Steroid Era."
Fans were treated to the home run record being broken three times, but in fact, it can be argued all of them were "juiced," so to baseball purists, the record still stands at 61.
Today, the economy and fan attendance has a very high correlation.
Baseball teams who have a rich history, such as the Cleveland Indians, are seeing record lows in attendance.
Gone are the days of the consecutive sell out game streak at Jacobs Field. In its place is an Indians owner that is happy when the stadium is half full with around 23,000 fans.
Back in the early 1990s, when the Skydome first opened, the Blue Jays were a team on the rise. The Skydome was filled every night with 50,000 loud fans and the team won two World Series in a row.
The following year saw the baseball strike.
Post-strike, attendance fell in Canada especially and the game essentially died.
The Montreal Expos were a team in the hunt when the strike of 94 called off the season.
When baseball returned, the fans didn't in Montreal.
The team relocated to Washington and the city of Montreal remains without a team today.
The Blue Jays and Indians are averaging the least amount of fans to their games, averaging roughly 15,500 fans a night, a far cry from the 50,000 and 46,000 seat capacity of the ballparks respectively.
Recently, Alex Rios has said about baseball in Toronto; "Baseball is dead here."
A team manager added, "Jays fans don't show up because the team is like a book that you already know the ending to, so why bother reading it?"
This message hit home to me so I respond with. "This story will have a different ending!"
The Plan to Revive Baseball Everywhere.
Step One: Division Re-Alignment
We'll start off by realigning the divisions back to the two divisions per league.
In the American League, you play five series against your division (with two extra games played against two teams, cycled every three years), and two series against the other division (1 four and 1 three-gamer).
For example, the Yankees play BOS and TOR one extra time in year one, the next year they play TB and BAL, and then in year three, CLE and DET, and so on and it repeats over again.
This leaves the schedule at 141 games.
Note: The schedule is shortened by about three and half weeks, this will be explained later.
I have not decided to switch teams from National to American League or visa versa, I believe that's too much of a change.
AL East
NYY, BOS, TOR, TB, BAL, CLE, DET
AL West
TEX, LAA, OAK, SEA, MIN, CWS, KC
In the National League, since there are more teams, the schedule is worked a little differently. You play four series, with one series being a four-game series.
This makes 91 games (13 games against each team) within the division leaving the remaining 50 games. There is also six games each against the other divisional teams.
This leaves 48 games, with the remaining two games played against the other division to be cycled through every four years. Example: ATL plays COL and SD two extra times in year one, then for year two they play SF and ARI two extra times and so on.
NL East
ATL, NYM, FLA, PHI, WSH, PIT, CIN, MIL
NL West
COL, SD, SF, ARI, LAD, HOU, CHC, STL
The total here is 141 games which means in my plan that I'm scrapping inter-league play. It's a dying breed in my opinion.
The only way its fair for everyone is if they play every team.
Some divisions are easier, some divisions are harder.
Step Two: Revenue Sharing
Since baseball will never go to a hard cap, this is a way to help out the struggling teams.
This has worked pretty nicely in the NHL, and in baseball, this could be a valuable option for teams.
Granted the NHL also has a hard cap, but it's just an idea I'm throwing out there.
This offers teams some extra cash to go after a big name free agent or two knowing they may have some extra cash in their back pocket.
The Blue Jays lost Roy Halladay mostly because they could not afford him anymore.
Doc often brought on average 2,500-5,000 more fans in the seats each time he pitched.
Star players have that kind of impact. Sammy Sosa, Mark McGwire, Barry Bonds, and Ken Griffey Jr. are past players that often brought big crowds with them.
Step 3:Expansion of Playoffs
This is my last and most important step.
People often say, "If you know the ending, why bother reading the book?" as a reason why to not show up to some teams games.
These teams make a good run, but always fall short come September.
Teams like the Tampa Bay Rays, Florida Marlins, Toronto Blue Jays, and Oakland Athletics are just a few teams that seem to fall into this lull, and to no one's surprised that they are ranked in the bottom tier in terms of home attendance.
With this thought in mind, I believe expanding the playoffs to eight teams is great for the game.
The rounds of 16 and eight are each five games series, while the LCS and World Series are both seven game series.
Granted, this runs late into the year when the snow falls, but I believe with the season shortened slightly by roughly three weeks, this will allow for playoff expansion.
Each division winner gets a top three spot, while the Wild Card winner from years part gets the fourth spot, with the remaining four spots taken from the other teams.
Looking at the AL East this year. They have currently the four best teams in the AL and only two will make the playoffs. That makes little to no sense to me. Thus, the reason for the article.
Playoffs energize cities and ball-clubs, but most of all, during the dog days of August and well into September, if teams are in playoffs races, it just makes for a better baseball atmosphere.
Also, playoff baseball brings in extra team revenue, a great thing to have in today's economy.
If the playoffs started right now the standings would finish like this for playoff seeding.
AL
TB/MIN/TEX/NYY/BOS/TOR/OAK/DET
NL
SD/ATL/STL/LAD/CIN/PHI/SF/COL
Doesn't this make for a more exciting regular season? It also limits travel and saves teams money in the long run.
Summary:
1. Division Realignment, lower season schedule to 141 games.
2. Revenue Sharing to allow smaller market teams the ability to compete with the likes of the Yankees, Red Sox, Phillies, etc.
3. Expansion of playoffs to eight teams
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