by jpgavin » Tue Sep 22, 2009 10:56 pm
This is how the franchises rank through 15 seasons.
1. Giants - 97.45 (11 seasons, 8 playoffs, 5 finals, 2 championships)
2. Yankees - 93 (11 seasons, 7 playoffs, 3 finals)
3. Pirates - 86.92 (12 seasons, 6 playoffs, 3 finals, 2 championships)
4. Cardinals - 86.58 (12 seasons, 3 playoffs, 3 finals, 2 championships)
5. Phillies - 85.73 (11 seasons, 3 playoffs, 2 finals)
6. A's - 85.64 (11 seasons, 3 playoffs, 3 finals, 3 championships)
7. Tigers - 85.27 (11 seasons, 5 playoffs, 1 final, 1 championship)
8. Dodgers - 84.64 (11 seasons, 3 playoffs, 2 finals, 1 championship)
9. White Sox - 83.5 (12 seasons, 4 playoffs, 2 finals, 2 championships)
10. Indians - 81.64 (11 seasons, 3 playoffs, 1 final, 1 championship)
11. Twins - 81.42 (12 seasons, 3 playoffs, 1 final)
12. Braves - 81.18 (11 seasons, 4 playoffs)
13. Red Sox - 80.09 (11 seasons, 2 playoffs, 1 final)
14. Cubs - 79.36 (11 seasons, 1 playoff)
15. Reds - 78.63 (11 seasons, 2 playoffs, 1 final, 1 championship)
16. Orioles - 78.18 (11 seasons, 3 playoffs, 2 finals)
It shouldn't change too much after the playoffs. The Red Sox will pass the Braves, and depending on how well they do in the playoffs, they may catch the Twins as well.
So... If we were going to go with the 11 best franchises and add a grab bag team, we'd lose the O's, Reds, Cubs, Braves and either the Red Sox or Twins. If we do two expansion grab bag teams, both the Red Sox and the Twins would be out.
If we kept it at 16 teams, we'd lose the O's or the O's and Cubs. (The Reds will pass the Cubs.)
And of course we could go to 18 teams.
Since an average team will have 84.33 points over 12 seasons, the real outliers are actually the Giants and the Yankees (way better than everyone else). But I'm not sure we'd want to eliminate those two franchises.
Last edited by
jpgavin on Thu Sep 24, 2009 6:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.