For the last two years, Milwaukee and Minnesota have been playing a split four-game series during the week. It is a part of the new Major League Baseball Interleague system as Houston Astros made the transition to American League giving both leagues 15 teams. This meant we would have an interleague series every series turn with two divisions playing each other along with the ‘rivalry’ matchups getting a four-game series during the week so each team would get two games at home. This officially needs some fine tuning after two years because it is hurting baseball’s economy with ticket revenue. How to fix it is pretty simple actually and it is beyond me why MLB hasn’t thought about it before.
The four-game weekday series works for only four interleague rivalries. Those are Chicago Cubs vs. Chicago White Sox, Oakland A’s vs. San Francisco Giants, New York Yankees vs. New York Mets and Los Angeles Angels vs. Los Angeles Dodgers. The reason why it works for these four rivalries is the opposing fanbase can make it to the other team’s venue with ease drawing a bigger crowd. When you have something like Minnesota-Milwaukee which is a six-hour trip, no one is making the trip to Milwaukee on Monday or Tuesday. Cleveland and Cincinnati, Tampa Bay and Miami are other examples where it makes things difficult for the opposing fan to travel elsewhere.
This doesn’t stop at the box office either. Sure, most people coming into town will spend more money. They might buy a Hank t-shirt, stuff animal, etc, but they are also seeing the game at better seats. Further, usually these opposing fans are probably staying at a hotel which is more revenue for the city along with spending money in the variety of bars and restaurants across the city. It might not be significant revenue unless the opposing team is really good and bringing in a great deal of fans, but it still is something missing in the last couple years.
Honestly, the series haven’t been as much without having Twins fans all over the city. As they have struggled, we haven’t seen as many around Milwaukee in the past couple years, but it is a good-hearted rivalry. Additionally, it is really fun to be in an opposing ballpark giving the other fans shit in a scenario like this one. You start singing Jason Kendall’s name like clocktower (JAAAAAAY-SON KEN-DALLLLLL, JAAAAAY-SON KEN-DALLLLLL) and talking about football in June because at times, Vikings fans have small-man’s syndrome (Love you guys). MLB is taking away all of these things away from Brewers and Twins fans along with other rivalries around the league. Hopefully, this is the last year with these split series during the week.
If they decided to these series on the weekend where MLB had four-game series split with Thursday/Friday being at the first place with Saturday/Sunday being at the second place. MLB can flip it every season allowing for both teams getting the weekend games. This would still help drive people to the opposing ballpark. It is a lot easier to take off work at the end of the week telling the boss, ‘We are going to see Brewers-Twins in Milwaukee and spending the whole weekend down there.’ Taking two days off work and probably staying an extra day to party is not the worst thing in the world. Most people are not taking off Monday and Tuesday because one, there is not much nightlife happening and two, many people don't want to come back to their job on Wednesday.
The other thing baseball could think about is adding an extra series to interleague. I doubt they want to do something like this because do you really want each team to get a weekend series with their interleague rival versus an extra division series? Odds are probably not, but if they could figure out a way to make a schedule work, that would be the dream honestly. The one place where I could see them finding a way is trying to subtract an inter-division series. But is it really beneficial to have them play another interleague series versus inter-division matchup like Arizona-Milwaukee? For revenue standards, no question about it, but for potential playoff record against the National League, it could be troublesome.
This is one of the minor things the new commissioner will have to address next season. Four-game series aren’t affecting the players rather it is affecting the fans whom want to cheer their home team in a city not their own.
Charlie.
Charlie.
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