Second Wild Card Will Lead to More Meaningful Regular Season Baseball
Bud Selig is pushing forward with his second wild card plan for 2012. This has irked some baseball people who see it as a cash grab and a prolongation of the playoffs. We are noted Selig critics. We will admit this contains more than a faint whiff of “this time it counts” style reform. However, we support this idea, because it will improve MLB’s regular season.
MLB schedules to heighten division races. It’s why the divisions exist. It’s why the Red Sox and Yankees play 19 times and generally in the season’s last week. The wild card, as presently constituted, ruins two out of the six potential division races per season. Losing home-field advantage for the first two rounds is not much of a disincentive.
What baseball wants is the Red Sox and Yankees going balls out to win the AL East in those final series. What baseball gets, most often, is the Red Sox and Yankees or the equivalent teams setting their pitching rotations, both with playoff bids more or less clinched. Even if there is a “Wild Card Race” it’s anticlimactic with teams across the country, almost undoubtedly not playing each other.
A one game playoff is hard on a team. It could mean back to back flights. It means burning your best starter. It leaves your team prone to the quirks of a single game. Because it is hard it provides enough of a disincentive to the wild card to keep top teams competing for the division until the finish. Adding the second wild card team also keeps more teams in play.
Selig’s playoff reform adds two extra October games, but the major result from the second wild card should be more meaningful baseball played down the stretch in August and September. It’s hard to see how that is a bad thing for fans or for business.
[Photo via Getty]

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9 Responses to “Second Wild Card Will Lead to More Meaningful Regular Season Baseball”
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March 3rd, 2012 at 8:56 AM
best commish in sports. i can see why you would not like him.
March 3rd, 2012 at 9:01 AM
so the Red Sox and Braves just gave up last year and didn’t actually have the worst September collapse ever? got it. nothing meaningful for them.
March 3rd, 2012 at 9:27 AM
Yeah, because usually a team has sewn up the wildcard by July and just packs it in for the rest of the season.
March 3rd, 2012 at 9:33 AM
So they didn’t compete for the division before? Some teams are better during the regular season. And sometimes the wild card wins the World Series. Putting them at a competitive disadvantage to begin the division series is not good for the rest of the playoffs.
March 3rd, 2012 at 9:40 AM
Say goodbye toquite possibly the day in sports, the final day of the regular season when 2 teams okay for do-or-die. Now 4 teams get to cruise control into September..
March 3rd, 2012 at 10:37 AM
i just don’t why you don’t call a spade a spade. it has zero to do with competitiveness. that’s just media friendly. this about making more money, and that is what Selig does best. he has done a helluva a job the last couple of decades doing just that. that’s what makes him a great commissioner. if the focus was on the division races, they would get rid of interleague and have these teams play one another another 3 or 4 times a piece (or whatever that works out to). but, they don’t, because interleague makes money. as a fan of the sport of baseball, i hate both the addition of the additional wild card team,because it rewards mediocrity. i hate interleague because it ruins the whole AL vs NL in the World Series. Hell, I’m a Yankee fan and hate the DH.
March 3rd, 2012 at 11:10 AM
Expanding baseball playoffs will lead to a more meaningful regular season expanding a college football playoff will lead to a more meaningful regular season expanding march madness will lead to a more meaningful regular season
March 3rd, 2012 at 11:23 AM
“Hell of” is the proper spelling.
March 3rd, 2012 at 6:54 PM
If baseball was serious about bettering its playoffs, 12 teams would make the postseason, not 10.