02/26/2023
A Better Idea for MLB Realignment
Given the fact that the owners have started to make noise about a salary cap thanks to the crazy off-season spending and the players have already vowed there will NEVER be a salary cap, I got to thinking about a creative way to create some fairness in baseball.
As things currently stand, the middle of the financial pack teams have no chance to out-bid the big spenders for the best talent in the game. Really, they can’t even keep their best players long term unless those players are willing to take less out of the goodness of their heart a la Nolan Arenado. I’m still shockad he didn’t opt out and double his income. It’s become an increasing problem when the Mets and Padres are determined to have $400-million payrolls and traditionally successful clubs like the St. Louis Cardinals invest less than half of that in their roster.
There is no realistic way for mid market teams to bridge that financial gap. And while some glibly say “you can’t but a championship,” that’s not entirely true. You can buy depth and erase roster mistakes by throwing money at the problems. If you’re a small market club like the Twins and you spend $270 million on a guy with a bum ankle, you can’t recover if he turns into a shell of his former self in year two or three. In fact, the ONLY scenario that is currently allowing the Redbirds to be likely candidates for a playoff spot is the fact they play in a weak division. Hmmm… Why shouldn’t all the teams benefit from playing in a better divisional situation?
Remember when the idea was floated a couple weeks ago about realigning baseball, a move that would have separated St. Louis from its National League Central foes in favors of “geography?” Why do we care about geography? This is the jet age. If clubs can trek the whole country to play every team In the major leagues under the new schedule, why can’t they be aligned by something other than geography? They’re already going EVERYWHERE.
Namely, the teams should be reshuffled each year based on their payroll, not their address. The biggest spenders should be put in one division, the next highest spenders in another, all the way down. What’s to keep clubs from depressing spending to get into the weakest division? Well, the six lowest spenders would be placed one each in the divisions with the biggest spenders. The smallest budget club would go in with the biggest spenders, something teams would certainly want to avoid.
As things currently stand:
Division 1: Mets, Padres, Yankees, Phillies… and Athletics.
Division 2: Dodgers, Blue jays, Angels, Braves… and Orioles.
Division 3: Astros, Rangers, Cubs and White Sox… and Pirates.
Division 4: Giants, Red Sox, Rockies, Cardinals… and Rays
Division 5: Twins, Brewers, Mariners, Tigers… and Reds
Division 6: Diamondbacks, Nationals, Marlins… and Guardians.
While the map isn’t the most important factor, regional rivalries aren’t going to be completely out the window because the teams in the northeast and on the west coast tend to be the biggest spenders and the clubs in the Midwest are largely the middle to lower tier.
The point is that the ridiculous spenders won’t victimize the weaker clubs in their traditional division by spending them into oblivion. The Mets, Dodgers and Yankees can beat the living daylights out of each other and some of the other teams would still have a real shot at winning their division and making the post season.
It’s not a salary cap. The big boys can go nuts if they want. But the teams in the middle can make rational decisions that won’t ruin their franchise. In fact, I could see a situation where this creates more good jobs for players because they won’t turn up their noses at their drafting franchise because they want to go somewhere to “have a chance to win.” If I’m the Marlins GM, I’m not spending $300m on my franchise player knowing I have no chance to beat the Mets, Phillies and Braves with or without him. But if I’m competing against mid majors… that’s a different scene entirely.
As a bonus, it will create excitement every year to see what division your favorite team will land in. The payroll deadline could be Feb. 1 to give the schedule makers a few weeks to iron out the details.