BTExpress said:
To be able to do this with 100 percent accuracy, you also need to know the league's tiebreaking procedures.
In every sport, it's very simple:
1) Compare the teams in the tie. If it's a two-way tie, the winner of the season series advances. If it's three or more, the best record among the tied against the others advances.
2) If they are still tied, go to the top of the standings and compared tied teams versus the No. 1 team. If still tied, compare versus No. 2 team, and so on down to the bottom of the standings.
3) Coin toss.
This year in women's basketball, the team I cover and another team tied for the same seed in the post season tournament. They had tied their season series, been swept by all the teams above them and swept the two below them, so it went to a coin toss.
Baseball could be fun to break because instead of teams being tied in the their season series 2-2, they could be tied 1-3 or 0-4 (1-3 would be a Monday split and Tuesday double forfeits; 0-4 would be two double forfeits).
I'm thinking they'll have to add a step between 2 and 3 to be fair in the tie-breakers: Record in games
played between tied teams. Team A going 2-2 in a four-game series in which all four games were actually played is different than Team A going 2-2 in a four-game series in which they won the two games played and had to forfeit the other two because of this dumb rule.
I
think the conference is trying to avoid a log jam of make-up games at the end of the season. They'll get that but they could also have 19 pissed-off baseball coaches. Like I said, though, I want this to happen just because I want to see how badly it'll be handled.