Let me preface this post by saying that John Smoltz is not
my favorite person, nor was he my favorite player while he was with the Boston
Red Sox and the Atlanta Braves. I think he is cocky and arrogant, but he is
also one of the smarter minds in Major League Baseball despite it all. I am
willing to give credit where credit is due, and Smoltz had a pretty damn good
idea to “fix” and revolutionize baseball for the better. Smoltz wants Major
League Baseball to adopt a similar schedule and policy that is already in place
for Minor League Baseball, especially for the postseason.
Smoltz had many ideas actually to fix baseball, but the idea
that most caught my eye was his idea to make September baseball and the
postseason pennant races meaningful again. The way it is now basically every
race for the postseason is all but decided and has been for quite some time
now. The days of going down to the last day of the season to decide a winner
seem to be all but over in Major League Baseball and Smoltz has an idea to
change that by implementing first-half and second-half winners.
Smoltz wants to eliminate interleague play and go back to
every team playing the same schedule, thus in the process dumping rivalry
series with the hopes of bringing back pennant races again. Smoltz hopes that
with this change the fans and the game would see more drama come to the game
while the number of teams tanking for draft picks and such could also go down. This
isn’t a new concept, the whole split-season schedule thing, as MLB did this
back in 1981 after the baseball strike, so the idea is not as out of left field
as you may think. Minor League Baseball is already doing it and it could create
a lot more interest at the Major League level if this was to be implemented.
If MLB adopted this proposal the Oakland Athletics would be
playing the Houston Astros to determine the winner of the American League West
as Houston had the better record in the first half, while the A’s had the
better record in the second half. The Tampa Bay Rays, who aren’t going to make
the playoffs in 2018, would face off with the Boston Red Sox. The St. Louis
Cardinals would face the Chicago Cubs and the Colorado Rockies would face the
Arizona Diamondbacks, and the Los Angeles Dodgers would be sitting at home come
October. What happens if you win both halves? You get a first-round bye. Simple
enough.
This would change the whole dynamic of the game, and not
just the playoff pennant races. Why would teams sell off as heavily at the
trade deadlines if they thought they had a chance to compete in the second
half? Also, why would teams continue to push to win 110 games or more in a
season when there is no advantage to it other than a possible first-round bye?
September call-ups would be all-the-more interesting with most teams still
locked into a potential second half pennant race and the overall number of
games being played would have to be dropped from 162 games to 154 games,
something the MLB Players Association wanted anyway.
The players win, the owners win, the league wins, and the
fans win. So, what’s stopping this from happening?
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Sorry for the Capatcha... Blame the Russians :)