Jump to content

McCall

Members
  • Posts

    10,598
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    12

Everything posted by McCall

  1. Well done. Misinformation is the only way to keep the tightly guarded POTD process a secret. Don't let Joshawaggie fool you Chawls. He's on the inside. He knows how it really works. Get that first ribbon and you'll get to be on the inside too. A rotating panel of previous winners, and the 26 members known as the "Majestic 12" make up the POTD committee. They are the only ones who really know how the process works. "The Inside"? Thanks for inviting me to the meetings.
  2. The A's may not leave the Bay Area, but they are extremely interested in moving to San Jose. The Giants are still opposing it, but it's far from over. I think Bud is trying to keep it under wraps as much as possible for now.
  3. So Albuquerque, Jacksonville, Providence, Birmingham and Mexico City get a team and St. Louis, a 3-sport major league city with an NBA-ready arena, doesn't? I'm not advocating they actually get an NBA team, but it just goes to show the level of quality of the selected cities in this concept. This all, of course, overlooking the obvious that a European style tier system wouldn't work over here, nor is one truly wanted.
  4. I know the difference. Everyone knows the difference. It's been established. But thanks anyway. Feel free to keep repeating that though, if it helps you. Leave ridiculous comparisons out of it. The odds of two same-city teams ending up in the same league is MUCH higher than the odds of a team being placed in the Arctic Circle. You sure you want to be the one introducing the concept of "common sense" into this discussion? Did I say it was more likely to happen? No I didn't. I said there's no rule against it, but it's not likely to happen. Same with same-market teams in the same league. Maybe you don't quite understand grown-up talk. That or you just can't accept that you might actually wrong about something.
  5. That and then there was a Phiadelphia team in the AL as well as the NL. Oh, I didn't realize we were still talking about this. Again though, if it were that big of a problem, the MLB would figure out a way to get PIT and PHL in different leagues over all these years. Judging by the fact that these same-state teams are still in the same league, it's not as big of a deal as some people are making it. For the upteenth time, there is a big difference between same-state and same-city teams. Same-city teams are two teams in one market. Same-state teams are two teams in the same state. As in the case with the Penn teams, there is usually a great distance between them, which is not the case with same-city teams. Big difference. There's no rule against it because it's just something that's common sense. There's also no rule against a team in the Artic Circle, but the likelihood of it happening is basically nonexistent.
  6. That and then there was a Phiadelphia team in the AL as well as the NL.
  7. They're not gonna put both NY teams in one league. Why wouldn't they? It's RE-alignment. This isn't something you are coming up with, it's something someone else is coming up with. Yes, and when you post it in here, it's up for discussion and other people's opinions. And I'm stating, as both opinion and to a degree nearly fact, that, unless you're completely splitting the league into an East-West format, having both NY teams in the same league does not make any sense. In baseball, with the two different types of play between the two leagues, when you have two teams in one market, you split them up so as to appeal to fans of both leagues. THAT'S why they brought in the Mets to replace the Dodgers and Giants in the first place, to get another NL team back in New York. It's not as big of a deal as you're making it, though. The Phillies and Pirates are in the same league, and soon, the Astros and Rangers will be in the same division. Yes, I realize that those are same-state teams and not same-city teams, but if MLB were that hellbent on keeping same-city teams in different leagues, then they'd do the same with same-state teams. Apparently they don't care as much as you think they do. Having same-city teams in the same league isn't that far out of the realm of possibility. As aci illustrated, there is a vast difference between same-state and same-market teams. You'll have to agree to disagree. There have been enough nutty things to happen in the history of pro sports realignment, and just pro sports administration in general, that you can't really count same-city teams in the same division out. It's one of those things like Interleague Play or the Astros moving to the AL West. It might seem crazy 5 years prior, and then BAM, it happens, and people just get used to it. Until I see an official MLB rule stating that two teams from the same city can't be in the same league, your argument does not hold much water. Just because you don't think it should happen, doesn't mean it can't happen. I'LL have to agree to disagree? Self righteous much? It's more likely that, in the current AL-NL format we WON'T see it happening for reasons that have been explained. The Astros switching leagues, albeit stupid, makes more sense than two same city teams in the same league.
  8. They're not gonna put both NY teams in one league. Why wouldn't they? It's RE-alignment. This isn't something you are coming up with, it's something someone else is coming up with. Yes, and when you post it in here, it's up for discussion and other people's opinions. And I'm stating, as both opinion and to a degree nearly fact, that, unless you're completely splitting the league into an East-West format, having both NY teams in the same league does not make any sense. In baseball, with the two different types of play between the two leagues, when you have two teams in one market, you split them up so as to appeal to fans of both leagues. THAT'S why they brought in the Mets to replace the Dodgers and Giants in the first place, to get another NL team back in New York. It's not as big of a deal as you're making it, though. The Phillies and Pirates are in the same league, and soon, the Astros and Rangers will be in the same division. Yes, I realize that those are same-state teams and not same-city teams, but if MLB were that hellbent on keeping same-city teams in different leagues, then they'd do the same with same-state teams. Apparently they don't care as much as you think they do. Having same-city teams in the same league isn't that far out of the realm of possibility. As aci illustrated, there is a vast difference between same-state and same-market teams.
  9. They're not gonna put both NY teams in one league. Why wouldn't they? It's RE-alignment. This isn't something you are coming up with, it's something someone else is coming up with. Yes, and when you post it in here, it's up for discussion and other people's opinions. And I'm stating, as both opinion and to a degree nearly fact, that, unless you're completely splitting the league into an East-West format, having both NY teams in the same league does not make any sense. In baseball, with the two different types of play between the two leagues, when you have two teams in one market, you split them up so as to appeal to fans of both leagues. THAT'S why they brought in the Mets to replace the Dodgers and Giants in the first place, to get another NL team back in New York.
  10. They're not gonna put both NY teams in one league. And who cares if it doesn't benefit Toronto to be in a division with 3 better teams? Get better. Don't move teams around just to give one team a better chance.
  11. http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/Asbestos-Investigation-Nassau-Coliseum-Islanders-Long-Island.html Well what do expect with an arena that's more than 4-years-old?
  12. Would a few seasons there be worth it over remaining in Nassau while trying to figure out their situation?
  13. Except for swapping Phoenix to Quebec, this is essentially what the NHLPA nixed.
  14. A. Other than Bud Selig, East-West seperation of MLB doesn't really fly with most fans. It's basically taking the tradition of the NL and AL and chucking it into an old, burning trash can and then putting the flames out by pissing on it. B.The DH rule you've suggested makes absolutely no sense and would never work. You can't leave it up to individual teams. You may end up with like 21 non-DH and only 9 with the DH or vice versa. It has to be one way or the other for each league or for both, not based on each team's preference. I don't think the DH rule would cause any trouble as long as teams couldn't change year-to-year. Odds are, it'd stay mostly as old NL teams with no DH, and mostly AL teams with the DH. In a perfect world, the designated hitter wouldn't exist, but I think the MLBPA would flip their lids if anyone suggested the DH be abandoned. As far as the AL/NL separation goies, we're already travelling down that slippery slope... first with interleague, plus two teams switching leagues, and then starting in 2013 interleague games being played every day of the year. The sanctity is gone, the names are relics, and the leagues are already merged anyways. Swapping half a dozen more teams to create a more geographically logical layout hardly seems out of the realm of possibility. You're going from "some changes" to "blow the whole damn thing up" in 60 seconds. None of the changes you've mentioned are anywhere near the the apocalypse of the sanctity of the game. Interleague everyday doesn't mean half the league is playing interleague games. Just one series at a time (maybe 3 here and there to meet the minium). In actuallity, interleague every series would reduce the total number of interleague games. However the league decided to maintain the total as it has been. And no, leaving teams to decide their own DH rules will not go as smoothly as you think. It's a rule that can drastically alter the make-up of each individual game and not something that can just be "however you want it ("you" meaning each team). It has to be a leaguewide rule. Either stays as is or both leaguse with or without. No individual teams.
  15. A. Other than Bud Selig, East-West seperation of MLB doesn't really fly with most fans. It's basically taking the tradition of the NL and AL and chucking it into an old, burning trash can and then putting the flames out by pissing on it. B.The DH rule you've suggested makes absolutely no sense and would never work. You can't leave it up to individual teams. You may end up with like 21 non-DH and only 9 with the DH or vice versa. It has to be one way or the other for each league or for both, not based on each team's preference.
  16. I don't think Kansas and Kansas State will be seperated. KSU definitely brings the football angle, which KU lacks, but coupled with KU's basketball (I know, only football dictates) and "academics", they make for a more attractive package than stand-alones. I also believe that their only real shot at a Power conference would be the Big Ten. I don't think the SEC or PAC would really be all that interested. But they do seem to fit well in the Big Ten. I think the Oklahoma schools, also more than likely a package only, could go either PAC (without Texas/Texas Tech) or possibly the SEC. While not AAU schools, I believe, they're not exactly on UConn's level of academia either. And while football is the moneymaker and both would help strengthen the conference in that regard, they also would help bring up the basketball status as well. Both schools are in down periods, like much of the PAC is right now, but that'll probably end.
  17. Missouri's also joining Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennessee/Vanderbilt, remaining with Texas A&M, LSU, Mississippi/MS State, all teams from bordering states or still in their region. Nebraska's joining Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois/Northwestern. Other plains/northern midwest schools. As shown in pro sports alignments, the Western US is a very spread out region and most top teams are gonna be so as well. Although called the "Pacific"-12, it's really the top western conference and so Colorado and Utah actually fit in there regionally.
  18. You can't force geographical rivalries by disbanding history-long rivalries. You've seperated the Cardinals and Cubs, one of the game's best. And even if you did this, why would all the California teams get put together EXCEPT San Diego? This looks more like some College breakdown rather than an appropriate realignment for a league with that had been in, more or less, the same alignment for more than a century.
  19. No more playoff expansion in baseball. 10 teams is already too many. It was just fine the way it was. Only change that needed to made was the top seed playing the wild card team regardless of division.
  20. Losing the Coyotes would lessen the celebration of Arizona's 100th birthday? How many people would even know they're gone? How many even know they're there now?
  21. You move Toronto, but leave New Orleans and Sacramento? Seriously?
  22. Considering you have schools like San Jose State in the Pac-12 and East Carolina/Southern Miss in the ACC, not too well. You can't base NCAA conferences so much on just geography. And saying "there's no such thing as" sounds kind of like this is magical fantasyland.
  23. Oh to be young and naive have more common sense than the BCS. Fixed.
  24. Did the Nats give up on baseball for some reason?
  25. If you're just going off of the NHL realignment scenario, then this does make the most sense. The NFL is actually pretty well set ip geographically for something like this. I know it would never happen because of rivalries and the tradition of te AFC-NFC split, but it is interesting.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.