Interleague play
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Interleague play is the term used to describe regular season Major League Baseball games played between teams in different leagues, introduced in 1997. Before the 1997 season, teams in the American League and National League did not meet during the regular season. AL/NL matchups only occurred during spring training, the All-Star Game, other exhibition games such as the Hall of Fame Game in Cooperstown, New York, and the World Series. None of these contests, except for the World Series, counted toward official team or league records.
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[edit] History
Interleague or interconference matchups have long been the norm in other professional sports leagues such as the NFL. Regular season interleague play was discussed for baseball's major leagues as early as the 1930s. Bill Veeck predicted in 1963 that Major League Baseball would someday have Interleague play.[1] The concept did not take hold until the 1990s (at least in part as an effort to renew the public's interest in MLB following the 1994 players' strike). Interleague play was not, and is still not, a universally endorsed innovation. However, it has added a new dimension to the major-league game, creating some matchups that had not been seen before, and some which held special significance for geographical and historical reasons.
The first interleague game took place on June 12, 1997, as the Texas Rangers hosted the San Francisco Giants at The Ballpark in Arlington. There were four interleague games on the schedule that night, but the other three were played on the West Coast, so the Giants–Rangers matchup started a few hours earlier than the others. Texas' Darren Oliver threw the game's first pitch and San Francisco outfielder Glenallen Hill was the first designated hitter used in a regular-season game by a National League team. San Francisco's Stan Javier hit the first home run in interleague play, and the Giants won the game, 4-3.
From 1998 to 2001, teams from the American League West played teams from the National League West, etc., typically scheduled to alternate between home and away in consecutive years. However, in 2002, the league began alternating which divisions played which divisions, and thus in 2002 the American League East played the National League West, the American League Central played the National League East, and the American League West played the National League Central. Matchups which had been of particular interest prior to this format — mainly geographic rivals — were preserved. This is expected to be the continuing format of the interleague schedule though corresponding divisions were integrated in this rotation in 2006.
Since 2002, all interleague games have been played prior to the All-Star Game. Most games are played in June, though May games have been scheduled since 2005.
The designated hitter (DH) rule is applied in the same manner as in the World Series and the All-Star Game. In an American League ballpark, both teams have the option to use a DH. In a National League ballpark, both teams' pitchers must bat. Some baseball observers feel it might be fairer to reverse this (in other words, always follow the DH rule of the visiting team instead of the home team), thereby offsetting the home-field advantage.
Through 2009, the American League holds an all-time series advantage of 1,673-1,534 and has finished with the better record in interleague play for 6 straight seasons, dating back to 2004.[2] 2006 was the most lopsided season in interleague history, with American League teams posting a 154-98 record against their National League counterparts.[2] The team with the best all-time record in interleague play is the New York Yankees of the AL at 133-95 (.583).[2]
In 2007, two teams -- the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Baltimore Orioles played 6 games with more than one interleague opponent. The former playing both the Toronto Blue Jays and the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim while the latter played both the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Washington Nationals.
As of 2009, the Civil Rights Game is a regular season interleague game; the first such match-up was between the Chicago White Sox and Cincinnati Reds in Great American Ballpark on June 20, 2009.
[edit] Records
[edit] Wins by league
| Year | Best Record | American League | National League |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | National | 97 | 117 |
| 1998 | American | 114 | 110 |
| 1999 | National | 116 | 135 |
| 2000 | American | 136 | 115 |
| 2001 | American | 132 | 120 |
| 2002 | National | 123 | 129 |
| 2003 | National | 115 | 137 |
| 2004 | American | 126 | 125 |
| 2005 | American | 136 | 116 |
| 2006 | American | 154 | 98 |
| 2007 | American | 137 | 115 |
| 2008 | American | 149 | 103 |
| 2009 | American | 137 | 114 |
| Overall | American | 1,673 | 1,534 |
[edit] Geographical matchups
Several interleague matchups are especially anticipated because of the relative proximity of the teams involved. In the case of each of these "rivalry" matchups, the two teams play six games (home-and-home series of three games each) every year:
- Chicago Cubs v. Chicago White Sox (Crosstown Classic, Windy City Series, or Red Line Series)
- Cincinnati Reds v. Cleveland Indians (Battle of Ohio)
- Los Angeles Dodgers v. Los Angeles Angels (Freeway Series)
- New York Yankees v. New York Mets (Subway Series)
- San Francisco Giants v. Oakland Athletics (Bay Bridge Series or Battle of the Bay Area)
- St. Louis Cardinals v. Kansas City Royals (I-70 Series or Show-Me Series)
- Minnesota Twins v. Milwaukee Brewers
- The Twins and the Brewers were formerly regional rivals in the American League, dating from the Brewers' relocation from Seattle after the 1969 season until the team's realignment into the NL Central for the 1998 season. This match-up also reflects the sports rivalry between the states of Minnesota and Wisconsin. The two metro areas are connected by Interstate 94. However, the term "I-94 Series" is used almost exclusively to refer to the games played between the Milwaukee Brewers and the Chicago Cubs.
- Houston Astros v. Texas Rangers (Lone Star Series)
- Florida Marlins v. Tampa Bay Rays (Citrus Series)
- Baltimore Orioles v. Washington Nationals (Beltway Series)
- Because the 2005 MLB schedule was already set when the Montreal Expos were relocated to Washington, D.C., the Orioles did not play the Nationals during the 2005 regular season. The two teams began playing each other in 2006. Prior to this, a geographical rivalry existed between the Expos and the Toronto Blue Jays.
The two other West Coast teams (who also share a spring training base in Peoria, Arizona) play annual home-and-home series as well:
[edit] Scheduling
Interleague play used to be scheduled in June and July. Later it was changed to occur only in June. In 2005, the format was changed again. Now, each team plays one series during the third weekend in May and plays the rest of their games in June, usually starting in the second week of June, only playing interleague opponents until the interleague schedule is complete for the year. In the American League, each team plays 18 games; in the National League, most teams will play 15 and some will play 18 games. In some years some NL teams may only play 12 interleague games. When this happens, most NL teams will play 18 interleague games, some will play 15 and a few will play 12. The reason for the difference is that during interleague play, all teams play interleague games at the same time, except for two NL teams that play each other. This is required because the NL has two more teams than the AL.
[edit] Arguments
[edit] Pros
- Interleague matchplay increases attendance. [3]
- Fans can see players they might not otherwise get to see, especially those who have only ever played in one league, such as Albert Pujols, Alex Rodriguez, Brandon Webb, etc.
- Certain geographic rivalries are played out during the regular season that otherwise might not happen for years at a time. The Yankees now play 6 games against the Mets each season every year whereas they would only have gone head to head in the 2000 World Series if not for interleague play.
- It creates matchups that might not have been seen in generations. For example, during the 2004 season, the Giants and Red Sox played each other for the first time since meeting in the 1912 World Series, and the Red Sox had never played at Wrigley Field until 2005. In 2007, the San Francisco Giants hosted the New York Yankees for the first time in the regular season at AT&T Park in San Francisco, in which the Giants took the series 2–1. In 2008, the New York Yankees visited the Pittsburgh Pirates for the first time since the 1960 World Series; Pittsburgh took this interleague series, 2-1.
- It allows for a rematch of the previous World Series. This has occurred in eight of the twelve seasons of interleague play: 1997 (Atlanta Braves at New York Yankees), 2000 (New York Yankees at Atlanta Braves), 2001 (New York Mets vs. New York Yankees), 2002 (Arizona Diamondbacks at New York Yankees), 2005 (Boston Red Sox at St. Louis Cardinals), 2006 (Houston Astros at Chicago White Sox), 2007 (St. Louis Cardinals at Detroit Tigers), and 2009 (Philadelphia Phillies at Tampa Bay Rays).
[edit] Cons
- There are many series that are not considered compelling; for example, series between currently poor-performing teams or teams with no historical or geographic connections.
- American League pitchers generally don't like taking batting practice for the opportunity to bat in one or two games. These pitchers are also unaccustomed to running the bases, which can lead to injury and premature fatigue. (For example, Chien-Ming Wang suffered a season-ending foot injury when running the bases during a Yankees-Astros game at Minute Maid Park on June 15, 2008.)
- National League designated hitters are generally bench players, while American League designated hitters are generally starters.
- With the two leagues not having the same number of teams, and with one division (the National League Central) containing six teams while another (the American League West) has only four (the other two divisions in both leagues consisting of five teams each), various irregularities in scheduling result. Most notably, teams no longer play identical opponents as their divisional rivals, and even where they do, they don't always play them an identical number of times. This can lead to "strength of schedule" disparities like those the NFL has to deal with on a yearly basis (which only affects 2 of the 16 games in a season). For example, in any given season, one NL Central team might play every AL East team except the (strong) first place team, while another NL Central team plays all but the (weak) last place team. Another scheduling problem is that because the leagues are not equal in size, there always has to be one NL game on interleague days (interleague is done with block scheduling like the NHL, so all the teams play interleague games on the same day, and all the interleague games are played in one part of the schedule (third weekend of May and most of June)
- The "rivalry" series that consist of six games a year for some teams leads to further scheduling inequities. For example, the Chicago Cubs play the recently competitive Chicago White Sox six times a year, while their division rival St. Louis Cardinals play the recently poor Kansas City Royals six times a year. Also, the Yankees face the Mets six times a year while the Rays face the Marlins six times a year.
- The World Series and All-Star Game are robbed of some of their mystique that used to result from the two leagues playing completely exclusive schedules during the regular season: in the case of the World Series, the "best in the business" playing the "best in the business" for the only time that whole year.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Proposals for interleague play prior to 1997
- For head to head listings, choose team and the time period to get full list and results
[edit] References
- ^ Hurwitz, Hy (1963-05-04). "Veeck Predicts Big Time Will Adopt Interloop Play". The Sporting News. pp. 4.
- ^ a b c "Interleague History". MLB.com. Major League Baseball. 6-29-2009. http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/history/interleague/records.jsp. Retrieved on 2009-06-29.
- ^ The Enid News and Eagle, Enid, OK - Rivalies add to interleague play


