Relegation: Can it/would it work?

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Songbird

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Jun 17, 2005
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I've always thought that a fantastic way to spice up our 4 major leagues is to do what they do (or at least used to) in many futbol leagues: Relegation

That is, the worst team in NBA, NHL and MLB gets dropped down to "triple-A" status and the "triple-A" champion gets to play the next year in the top league, and as long as the "triple-A" team doesn't have the worst record the next year, it gets to stay in the league, and previous "worst" top-league team has to win the "triple-A" championship to get back into hallowed status.

I don't think it could work in the NFL because there's no "triple-A" equivalent, though we could ship the Raiders to Canada and take the Eskimos or Argos or something.

Would it ever work?

I think it would make every single game championship-important. No days off. Elite-level competition because the embarrassment of being demoted would provide the motivation to excel.

Just a (15-year) thought.
 
It would work great if it was ingrained in our system for many years as it is in Europe, but it wouldn't work here because no owner is going to take the chance to own a team where his profits could be compromised by the drop.

Too bad. I think it's one of the coolest aspects of European soccer.
 
Won't work in baseball because all AAA teams are affiliates of major league clubs. Plus, most AAA parks are not suitable for major league games.
Won't work in NBA becuase the NBDL sucks.
I have no idea about hockey, but I think it would be the same as baseball.
 
Sure -- if you get around TV contracts, the fact that the worst MLB team would slaughter the best Triple-A team (ditto for every other sport) and the fact that minor-league stadiums are band boxes compared to their big-league counter parts -- then yes, it could work.
 
spnited said:
Won't work in baseball because all AAA teams are affiliates of major league clubs. Plus, most AAA parks are not suitable for major league games.
Won't work in NBA becuase the NBDL sucks.
I have no idea about hockey, but I think it would be the same as baseball.

AHL and ECHL teams are affiliates of NHL teams.
 
Cool idea, especially in baseball, but I think the logistics are heavily against it.
 
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a) It could only work for baseball. (Maybe hockey, too.) And of course, you'd have to get rid of the affiliations, which would really hurt the major league teams.

b) Lower-level soccer stadiums in England are pretty much Double- or Triple-A equivalent, too. But if they can somehow find a way to field a successful enough team to stay in the "big leagues," then they can increase their revenue to build a bigger/better stadium.

Logistics and tradition are heavily against it, but boy, is it a cool idea competition-wise.

Send the D-Rays back to the International League! Promote Rochester pronto! :D
 
Yeah, I thought about the logistics, but financially there would be some kind of way to make it work. Contracts are structed in a way that if you're relegated, everyone on the "pro" team makes the same amount in the "minor" league.

Example: everyone on the Dodgers makes different money, some $12M/year, others $1.2M/year. But if the Dodgers are relegated, every player would make $500,000K until they earn their spot back in the majors, where their contracts resume at their pre-relegation numbers. And that would be the end-all, be-all nut-cracker aspect of playing in the major leagues.

As for park dimensions, making them relatively equal to major league parks wouldn't be too much of a task. Even then, keep the dimensions the same.

There would be several other logistics, but solving the financial one first would make the other ones easily solveable, I think.
 
To make relegation work, the farm system model wouldn't exist. Each team would pay it own freight. No salary caps, nothing like that, but on the other hand, you'd have almost total free agency every year. You'd have contracts that would have relegation clauses, etc.

The only limit to keep things under control for the good of whatever sport would be roster caps, something European soccer wishes it had with its system.

In a way, it's fairest. I mean, if the Yankees want to blow $400 million, they could. No reason to penalize them for it. If your team is only willing to pay $10 million, most likely, it would reflect in the results.

But ultimately, it puts the onus on results on the field.

It would be cool to try and I always thought MLS was the one league where it could work as relegation is accepted by soccer fans and there is a system in place to pull it off, but it wouldn't work anywhere else because it's so foreign to our sporting culture.
 
Songbird said:
Example: everyone on the Dodgers makes different money, some $12M/year, others $1.2M/year. But if the Dodgers are relegated, every player would make $500,000K until they earn their spot back in the majors, where their contracts resume at their pre-relegation numbers. And that would be the end-all, be-all nut-cracker aspect of playing in the major leagues.

More likely, as it is in the European leagues, those (desirable) players would simply be let out of their contracts and join other teams. That's what I meant by a relegation clause, if the club gets dropped, they're free to go.
 
For baseball and hockey...
If you wanted to make it work all affiliations would have to be scrapped effectively making everyone in the minors a free agent. Then (gulp) you'd have to have the owners willing to pick up significant wage increases in the lower leagues - everyone is now on their own after all.
In other words no way in heck.

NFL's minor leagues are college football. It will never change.

NBA could put some dough into its lower level developmental programs, and it could work and could improve the league. The draft would have to be eliminated however.
 
Good point, Bubbler. And how I think it should work here is that all contracts, let's say starting in 2010, cannot have relegation clauses. You want to play in the big leagues, boy, you better produce like a big-leaguer ...

That's the nut-cracker pressure that would drive the players every day.
 
I've thought the same thing, Xan. It would be great, but too many mountains would have to be moved. Somebody would throw up the stop sign somewhere along the way.
 
Not only affiliation, but also you have the issue of market size where clearly the major leagues have generally more desireable markets. You'd have a serious problem too if say the Yankees got relegated and Ottawa AAA was promoted for example.
 
I absolutely love the idea, but have grown convinced it couldn't work for one simple issue: the country is too big, making travel an insurmountable issue.

Virtually every minor league system in North America is broken up into regions to minimize the travel. A road trip for the single-A Eugene Emeralds may take them to Salem, Portland, Tri-Cities and Spokane. If you change that to Buffalo, Oklahoma City, New Orleans and Tucson the team won't survive.

Countries with relegation systems are small enough to make it work.

I could see it done on a very small scale, like the MLS and USL. Beyond that I just don't see it.
 
PCLoadLetter said:
I absolutely love the idea, but have grown convinced it couldn't work for one simple issue: the country is too big, making travel an insurmountable issue.

Virtually every minor league system in North America is broken up into regions to minimize the travel. A road trip for the single-A Eugene Emeralds may take them to Salem, Portland, Tri-Cities and Spokane. If you change that to Buffalo, Oklahoma City, New Orleans and Tucson the team won't survive.

Countries with relegation systems are small enough to make it work.

I could see it done on a very small scale, like the MLS and USL. Beyond that I just don't see it.

Bingo. The elephant in the room, before any of the other logistical questions can get answered.
 
But Steinbrenner would save so much money, from $400M/year to roughly $15M. It would make those Yanks wanna hurry the **** up back to the majors. A-Rod, from $25M/year to half a mil. Rich thought.

And ****, Ottawa could probably beat the Pirates, Nats and D'Rays.
 
The best league where this would work right now is in Arena Football. You have the AFL and afl2 already in place; most of the afl2 franchises that are successful could probably compete in the higher league. There's some disparity between the two levels, but it's not so pronounced.

For other leagues, the contractual logistics would make it impossible. The only way to make it work would be to split the leagues into a top tier and bottom tier. Plus owners would be dead-set against it to a man. No big-league owner wants his team shunted off to a second-rate level.
 

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