The Major League Baseball Wild Card Game is a play-in game which was added to the Major League Baseball postseason in 2012.[1] The addition keeps the playoff format similar to the three-tiered postseason format used from 1995 through 2011, but adds a second wild-card team. Two wild-card teams in each league play each other in a single-game playoff after the end of the regular season. The winner of the game advances to the Division Series. The home team for the wild-card game is the team with the better regular-season record.
If both teams have the same number of wins and losses, tie-breaking procedures are used, with no additional games being played. On the other hand, teams tied for the division title will now always play a one game playoff for the division title, even if both teams are already qualified for the postseason. This is in contrast to the earlier wild card format used, for example in the 2005 season when the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox tied for first place in their division but did not play an additional game as both teams were qualified for the postseason in any event.
In the division series, the winner of the wild-card game will always face whichever division champion has the best record. All division winners receive a bye as they await the result of the game. Previously, a wild-card team could not face the champion of its own division. This change makes it possible for the two teams with the best record in the league to face each other before the League Championship Series for the first time since 1997 (from 1995 to 1997 the matchups for the division series were determined by annual rotation between the west, central and east divisions).
Purpose
The addition of a second wild-card team to each league was completed for multiple reasons:
- Added importance to division races. Before 1995, only division-winning teams advanced to the playoffs, creating excitement when teams within a division competed for the best record in that division. From 1995 to 2011, the urgency of a division race was reduced when the second place team also made the playoffs as a wild card. In addition, the winner of the wild-card game is at a disadvantage in the next series, due to having to make strategic decisions to avoid immediate elimination, such as play its best pitchers available, without regard for future playoff games.
- Wild-card teams are penalized. In the four-team format from 1995 to 2011, the wild-card team had to win just as many postseason games as a division winner in order to reach the World Series. Now the winner of the wild-card game is at a disadvantage because it has to play an extra game.
- Increases postseason interest and revenue, with the tension of a sudden-death match at the start of the playoffs, similar to tie-breaker games held to resolve regular season ties. Recent examples of this were seen in tie-breaking games in 2007, 2008, and 2009, as well as the final day of the 2011 regular season.
- With an additional playoff spot at stake, more teams are competing at the end of the regular season for a place in the playoffs.
Implementation
With the adoption of MLB's new collective bargaining agreement in November 2011, baseball commissioner Bud Selig announced that a new playoff system would begin within the next two years; the change was ultimately put into place in 2012.[2]
Even though one of the stated purposes of the Wild Card game was to create disadvantages for Wild Card teams in the postseason,[3] Wild Card Game winners have won three of the first six Division Series played under the new format. Of the best-of-five Division Series lost by Wild Card Game winners, two lost in five games and one lost in four games. The 2014 postseason featured the first Series sweeps involving Wild Card Game winners, but they were both in favour of the AL Wild Card Kansas City Royals who swept both the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and the Baltimore Orioles en route to the first World Series featuring both NL and AL Wild Card Game winners, in which the San Francisco Giants defeating the Royals in seven games.
The one-game, win-or-go-home Wild Card format favors teams with at least one dominant pitcher. In the eight games played since the new Wild Card system began in 2012, four have been shutouts. In three of the four others, the losing team scored 1, 2, or 3 runs. Only the 2014 AL Wild Card game between the Kansas City Royals and Oakland Athletics featured high scoring by both teams, with the Royals eventually winning 9-8 in 12 innings. The margin of victory has been four runs or more in five of the eight games played, three runs in two of the games, and one run only once—in the 2014 Royals-Athletics games.
Results
American League
National League
Win–loss records
By team
By manager
See also
References