Baseball should have shorter season
Needs to add more playoff teams, easier for fans to follow
Frank Pellegrino
Issue date: 5/7/09 Section: Editorial/Opinion
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If this were the NBA or the NHL, more than a quarter of the season would already be over. And if this were the NFL, we would already have completed more than 156 percent of the entire season.
However, this isn't any of those other leagues; this is Major League Baseball. Having more than 25 games played means there is still over five months of regular-season games to go.
Think about that. MLB will knock off another 25 games in the next month, and they would still have enough time left in their marathon of a season for an entire NFL schedule, plus the pre-season.
The problem is simple: Major League Baseball's season is way too long. And for what?
Don't get me wrong - I love baseball as much as anyone. I played it my entire life and can appreciate the stigmas of the game as much as anybody. But I want less.
It is so hard to follow an entire Major League season as a fan. It takes place over two school years, an entire summer and more than half a calendar year. Teams take so many twists and turns in that amount of time that you never know whether or not your team is for real. With so much time, every single team in the league appears to belong in the cellar at some point.
To fans of teams at the bottom of the league, the abundance of games makes the pain linger for even longer. They can't wait for it to be over (believe me, I grew up a Brewers fan in the 90s and early 2000s).
And, to the fans of teams at the top of the league, they wish those last 20 or 30 games would just go away. It appears to just be delaying the inevitable.
If many of the fans can't wait for the pain to end, and a good portion think having so many games is just delaying the inevitable, then why do we have them?
Why do they need 162 games to figure out who the best team is? I am very confident that we would know who the best teams were after 130 games, or even better, 110.
To test this theory I went on ESPN's Web site and checked the division winners from the past five seasons. After that, I checked which team was the division leader after 130 games during those five seasons.
Of the 30 teams that won their division during those five years, 25 of them were in first place after August 25, when all teams have played 130 games or more. The New York Mets, in first place after August 25, failed to win the division twice, pulling off consecutive end-of-the-season chokes in historic fashion.
Spring Break


Viewing Comments 1 - 2 of 2
alumni jim
posted 5/07/09 @ 4:03 PM CST
I agree. It's ridiculous to see World Series games in the snow, Season Openers in 34 degree rain showers, and don't get me started on the World Baseball Classic. (Continued…)
Simon
posted 9/17/09 @ 10:03 PM CST
I'm old enough to remember when the "October Classic" The World Series actually took place in early October! The extra games are just padding the deep pockets of the owners. (Continued…)
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