National Post (National Edition)

MLB playoff proposal needless

This is how you devalue meaning of regular season

- SCOTT STINSON

Lin Toronto

ate last year, I wrote a piece that argued if our major sports leagues wanted to solve the problem of fading interest in their regular seasons, they should kill the playoffs.

It wasn’t exactly a realistic proposal: the leagues have far too much invested in the glory of their playoffs to undo them. But still: what if the regular season games actually mattered for something more than just playoff seeding? It’s an intriguing thought.

Major League Baseball, it seems, is considerin­g going in precisely the opposite direction, having floated the idea of expanding its playoffs.

I suppose I should take some pride in this. At this point in time, there is a measure of vindicatio­n in holding the contrary view to MLB commission­er Rob Manfred on just about anything.

Manfred tried to whitewash a cheating scandal in a way no one is buying, he does not understand why or how his baseballs suddenly started flying further, and he watched as a rich team traded away a generation­al superstar to another rich team under the guise of fiscal prudence.

The games take too long, and it hasn’t attracted young viewers, a problem it has combated by ensuring World Series games start very late. If Manfred says X, you can feel pretty good about having your money on Y.

The commission­er has been blasted in recent days for having used the playoff expansion trial balloon as an attempt to distract from legitimate concerns about the cheating scandal. It’s a fair point: spring training is beginning, and the Houston Astros already are doing their level best to sound not the least bit contrite about their unsavoury tactics. At some point, the commission­er will release the results of the investigat­ion into the Boston Red Sox’ cheating scandal, and we will debate how much of a taint there is on two of the last three World Series championsh­ips. But hey, more playoffs! So sparkly!

As shameless as the playoff expansion idea is as a distractio­n tactic, it deserves to be ridiculed on its own merits.

Baseball, more than the other North American leagues, used to have a regular season that mattered. A team won each of the American and National leagues, and they met in the World Series. Two playoff teams became four as the sport expanded, but a team still had to prove itself over the long slog of a 162-game schedule to get into the post-season. Divisional realignmen­t and the addition of the wild-card team in each league doubled the playoff field after the 1994 World Series was cancelled — single tear for the Montreal Expos — and this had the effect of giving many smaller-market teams at least the occasional shot at the playoffs. I can’t be a total purist on this: if MLB still had four divisions and four playoff teams, it feels like the big-market franchises would have been mostly trading the World Series among them for the past 25 years.

But things started to go off the rails when baseball added the second wild card for the 2012 season. This created a system where very good teams who proved themselves by winning consistent­ly over six months were rewarded with a single post-season game. Having a 162-game season ride on one extra game is like an NFL team, after 16 games, having its fate determined by a 10-minute playoff.

Instead of more teams being lured into a playoff chase, the opposite has happened, with franchises opting for painful rebuilds rather than chasing a post-season run that could end in about three hours, depending on the number of pitching changes.

The new proposal, then, would fix a problem of baseball’s own making by killing the one-game playoff. Instead, two more wild cards in each league, and a 12-team first round, with the top team in each league getting a bye to the second round. More teams would remain in playoff contention as the season wore on, which would in turn mean more middling teams given the chance to make hay in a short series.

In its quest to add more “important” games to the calendar, MLB would dramatical­ly reduce the amount of games that actually mean something.

The way this league is being run, that feels about right.

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