Ratings aside, tweaked MLB play-offs must be fair



Speaking to newspaper editors last week in New York, Bud Selig, league commissioner, confirmed the obvious - Major League Baseball, he said, is moving "inexorably" towards play-offs expansion, probably in time for the 2012 season.

Beyond acknowledging that the MLB would add a wild-card team in each league, bringing the total of clubs reaching the post-season to 10, Selig did not confirm any other information about an expanded format.

There is talk that some television executives - and as always, their wishes will be examined - would like a one game "play-in" for each league between the two wild-card teams. Such a format - win or go home - would undoubtedly attract plenty of viewers without extending the already long play-offs schedule very much. Executives point to "play-in" games in recent years between teams with even records that offered thrilling competition and some of the highest ratings of the year.

But there are problems with such a format. After a six-month, 162-game season, a one-game play-off is not a fair way to decide who advances to the next round.

Think of the inequity for a team to win, say, 96 games as the top wild-card entrant, being eliminated by an 86-win team in nine innings.

If baseball is going to add another round of play-offs, a best-of-three series would offer plenty of drama - and some fairness, as well - without extending the schedule much beyond the current format.

Nepotism is the name of the game

Salman Khan’s father, Salim Khan, is one of Bollywood’s most legendary screenwriters. Through his partnership with co-writer Javed Akhtar, Salim is credited with having paved the path for the Indian film industry’s blockbuster format in the 1970s. Something his son now rules the roost of. More importantly, the Salim-Javed duo also created the persona of the “angry young man” for Bollywood megastar Amitabh Bachchan in the 1970s, reflecting the angst of the average Indian. In choosing to be the ordinary man’s “hero” as opposed to a thespian in new Bollywood, Salman Khan remains tightly linked to his father’s oeuvre. Thanks dad.