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TODAY: Friday, May 12
Bud's chemistry set seeks secret formula



Being the futuristic baseball scientist that he is, Bud Selig is thinking about tinkering with realignment again. Stop us if you've heard this one before.

Among the latest options being considered:

  • Splitting the National League into two eight-team divisions instead of four divisions of four teams each.

  • Keeping the American League in its current 5-5-4 format, except that each division would have at least one new member. Arizona would replace Texas in the four-team AL West. Texas would move to the five-team AL Central. And either Detroit or Cleveland would shift to a five-team AL East, replacing Tampa Bay (bound for the NL).

    Current realignment plan
    NL East
    Mets
    Expos
    Pirates
    Phillies
    NL Southeast
    Braves
    Reds
    Marlins
    Devil Rays
    NL Central
    Cubs
    Cardinals
    Brewers
    Astros
    NL West
    Dodgers
    Giants
    Padres
    Rockies
    AL East
    Yankees
    Red Sox
    Orioles
    Blue Jays
    AL Central
    Indians
    Tigers
    Rangers
    Royals
    Twins
    White Sox
    AL West
    A's
    Angels
    Diamondbacks
    Mariners

    Schedules
    National League
  • 20 games against each division opponent
  • 9 games against each team in "sister" division (NL East-Southeast, NL Central-West)
  • 6 games against other NL teams
  • 18 interleague games

    AL East and West
  • 18 games against each division opponent
  • 9 games against other AL teams
  • 18 interleague games

    AL Central
  • 15 or 14 games against each division opponent
  • 9 games apiece against other AL teams
  • 18 interleague games

  • Got all that? Well, don't spend too much time memorizing it, because the chances of either permutation actually happening are right up there with the odds of Rey Ordonez winning the home-run title.

    But Selig has his realignment committee studying all this because he's trying to satisfy the critics of his previous realignment scheme -- which hasn't even been passed yet.

    The commish's original format would divide the NL into four geographically correct four-team divisions -- with no wild card and heavily unbalanced schedules that favored more intradivision games. The AL, meanwhile, would go to a 4-6-4 scheme, originally conceived, we believe, by Buddy Ryan.

    That plan is still a better bet for election than Al Gore. But among those raising questions about all this is union chief Don Fehr. Oh, and stop us if you've heard that one before, too.

    Fehr has expressed two reservations about the new realignment scheme:

  • 1) Does not having the wild card in the National League hurt interest in the sport down the stretch?

  • 2) Is it "fundamentally unfair" to have one six-team division (the AL Central) and all other divisions with four teams?

    "We're not saying, 'Don't do it,'" Fehr said. "We're just saying we've got to look at it pretty closely."

    So while the union is looking, Selig and his cohorts are also examining all options. But they're not finding any good ones.

    There are numerous problems with retaining that 5-5-4 breakdown in the AL. And the most fundamental problem is this: Detroit and Cleveland would rather move to Switzerland than move back to the AL East, from whence they came six years ago.

    Unlike Arizona, which has no veto power as an expansion team, the Tigers and Indians have been around 100 years. So if they say, "We won't go," that scenario is closed.

    The other problem is that 5-5-4 destroys the whole reason to realign the AL in the first place -- to make the schedule more workable.

    "Twenty-four years ago," Selig said, "we went to a balanced schedule in the American League on a one-year trial -- and we never got back to (the unbalanced scheduled). To me, that's unbelievable. We've got to get back to an unbalanced schedule. And we've got to get Texas out of the West, into the Central."

    No one thinks having two divisions of four teams and one division of six is a perfect solution, either. But the scheduling gurus have told Selig that having an even number of clubs in a division is more essential to baseball's future than bats, balls and Rafael Furcal.

    It's those odd numbers, you see, that cause teams to play so many games in September against clubs out of their division, because one team always has to be the "swing" team.

    For instance, there may or may not be a Cleveland-Detroit race in the AL Central this year. But if there is, it will be from afar -- because these two teams don't play a single game against each other after June 26. And it's that kind of scheduling which is under attack by the commish.

    Then there's the National League. The Selig Peace Plan hasn't quite been ratified there, either.

    His original four-division NL scheme appeared to be all set, too. Arizona has conceded it's going to the AL, whether it wants to or not. And the Reds are believed to have indicated they will consent to leave their glamorous McGwire-Sosa-Griffey-Bagwell division and move to an all-Eastern Time Zone division with Atlanta, Florida and Tampa Bay.

    So what's the problem there? No wild card.

    It may have been a sacrilegious idea just a few years ago, but Selig says baseball's polling shows that more than 80 percent of its fans now favor the wild card. Bob Costas apparently hasn't been allowed to vote enough in those polls.

    So how could the NL be rezoned to preserve it? It wouldn't be easy. Three divisions is out, because that creates a geographical mish-mosh that Selig opposes. That means the only alternative is two divisions. And with two divisions, you'd get two wild cards for the price of one.

    But one big downside to that idea is that it wrecks those unbalanced schedules. In a four-division schedule, NL teams would play clubs in their own division 20 times each. That plan would go up in smoke in an eight-team division, making for an unhappy commish.

    So clearly, Selig is still in favor of four divisions, even if some folks think it may be unfair to have a wild card in one league but not the other.

    "There's nothing unfair about it," he says. "We've gone over and over this. We think it's fair."

    But what happens the first time that say, the Reds, win 101 games, still finish behind the Braves and don't go to the playoffs because there's no wild card?

    "Oh, they'll be ranting and raving," Selig said. "I understand that."

    In fact, they may rant and rave loud enough to pave the way for more teams in the playoffs. Don't think that's impossible, either. But for now, at least, Selig says: "I would hope not. I'm really not in favor of that."

    No, he's got enough realignment options on his buffet. And they're a lot like the weather in Milwaukee: Wait around long enough, and they're guaranteed to change.

    Jayson Stark is a senior writer at ESPN.com.
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