Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

I agree with the premise of this article


notoriousgod71

Recommended Posts

The premise, from the article (paraphrased)

 

This new playoff format begs for, and rewards, mediocrity.

 

I don't agree. The new playoff format doesn't beg for mediocrity. The new playoff format could reward mediocrity, but it's unlikely. The new playoff format is keeping fans in the wild card hunt interested in baseball well into September.

 

It's probable that 3 of the 4 wild card teams will finish the season with at least 90 wins. Is that mediocre? I don't think so. That means there will be one team with less than 90 wins that will make it into the playoffs as a wild card. Their reward? A do or die one game playoff on the road.

 

I guess the best thing to do would be to win your division, secure home field advantage and not worry about a team with 85 wins making it to a one game playoff.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1987 Twins won 85 games during the regular season. Led the division or was only behind in percentage point the whole season. It was a team that won when it needed to. The Phillies on a tear could be a dangerous team in the playoffs. Are they a mediocre team when their star player are injured. If they win it all it does not matter. Can the Cardinals do likewise? They have the starters to do it. Mediocre? Not if you win.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I definitely disagree with this article.

 

It starts by saying "It's one thing for a division to have a down year and produce a champion with a record just over .500. Such anomalies happen," then lambastes the 2 wild card system for supposedly rewarding mediocrity. But under the current structure, I think you are much more likely to have a near or sub .500 division winner than a near or sub .500 wild card winner. I get that teams with poor records are still in the wild card hunt, but they haven't actually won it. That's what matters - winning it. Having more teams in the hunt makes for interesting baseball in my opinion, and just because the Phillies were 57-67 at one point doesn't mean they don't deserve the playoffs if they can pull off 85 wins and pass the Cardinals . When we actually have a wild card winner with 80 victories, then I'll agree with the article. But of course that won't happen because it would require 11 out of 15 teams to have a losing record.

 

If you want to complain about rewarding mediocrity, the complaint should be that there are 6 divisions instead of 4. Having a division with only 4 teams is begging for a sub .500 team to make the playoffs. Of course, baseball is taking a step to avoid that by moving Houston to the AL West.

 

If anything, the addition of the 2nd wild card and 1 game playoff is rewarding mediocrity less - not more, as there is a greater incentive to win the division. Now, all that winning the top wild card spot guarantees you is 1 more game instead of a five game series. And, if the winner of the 2nd wild card spot can win the 1 game playoff, then go on to beat the team with the best record in the league in a 5 game series (though 7 would be better)without homefield advantage, they deserve to be there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I agree with many of the points brought up by the previous posters. Another problem I have with the article is his attempt to compare across seasons based on record. He states,

 

"Should the second wild-card leading Cardinals continue at their current pace, however, they will finish with just 85 victories – three fewer than the previous low for a wild card, the 2006 Dodgers, and six less than the average wild-card winner."

 

Overall record tells you nothing about the absolute strength of a team but rather their relative strength compared to their opponents. So this years Cardinals team, while not the strongest of teams in 2012, could be just as strong or stronger than any of the teams he thinks is playoff worthy from previous years. You can't compare teams across seasons with any accuracy much less down to a few games.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Twins community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...