Best Baseball Teams All Time

01321026273_1933worldseriesprogram.jpgBaseball is a game that is almost synonymous to the word American. Although it is played in a lot of places across the globe, it is in the United States where complete appreciation of the sport can be observed. With that, it is just natural to see the best baseball teams of all time coming from the US.

Major league baseball has been around for 140 years or so, and through its lengthy existence, a number of teams came and went. Those who made a huge impact on the country, however, continue to exist in the heart of every American. Here are some of them.

1. New York Yankees (1927) – Topping the list is the Yankees team in 1927. Babe Ruth had 60 home runs while Lou Gehrig had 47. Tony Lazzeri had a batting average of . 309, Bob Meusel hit . 337 and Earl Combs had . 356 average. The Yankees outscored opponents by 400 runs and had a record of 110-44.

2. Cincinnati Reds (1975) -Another one of the best baseball teams of all time is the Cincinnati Reds of 1975. The team is referred to as the Big Red Machine with its lineup of great players including hall of famers Johnny Bench, Joe Morgan, Tony Perez and Pete Rose. Sluggers Ken Griffey, Sr. And George Foster were also on the team. They had 108 wins and beat the Red Sox in the 1975 World Series.

3. Chicago Cubs (1906) – The Cubs had 116 wins and 36 losses in 1906. It is the best winning percentage ever. They beat the Giants by 20 games within the regular season but lost to the Chicago White Sox in the World Series.

4. St. Louis Cardinals (1934) – Led by Hall of Famers Dizzy Dean, Frankie Frisch, Joe Medwick and Ripper Collins. The Cardinals beat the Detroit Tigers in seven games and became World Series champions.

5. Brooklyn Dodgers (1955) – The Dodgers beat the Milwaukee Braves by 13 games during the regular season. This is the team who got the sole Championship for Brooklyn. It erased all the memories of the past when it took out the Bombers in a highly memorable series that went seven games.

Major League Baseball In The Media

21321026501_mlb-u-boston-412-1.jpgWhile the NFL may have surpassed Major League Baseball in popularity, baseball is still America’s great game. The game has a rich history in the country that is 150 years old. Almost since the inception of the game, there has been some form of media coverage.

In the early years of baseball, newspapers told the tale of all the games. There were reporters and statisticians watching every game and reporting on them. As a result, the popularity of the game continued to grow. Around the turn of the century, baseball was hitting its stride in popularity.

In 1910, a batting contest was sponsored by Chalmers, a popular automaker. The contenders were Ty Cobb and Nap Lajoie. Cobb was regarded as the game’s greatest villain while Lajoie was well liked in the game. The popularity of the race was well covered by the media and it brought baseball to the forefront of the news. A decade later, a scandal involving the Chicago White Sox throwing the World Series was largely brought to light through investigative reporting.

The development of radio was a huge change in the game. Now, people could listen to the action from their own home. By the 1940′s, some baseball games were starting to be televised. In 1947, the World Series was televised for the first time. By this time television sets were becoming common. 1951 saw the first baseball game broadcast in color. That same year, Bobby Thompson hit his infamous ‘shot heard round the world’ in a game broadcast nationally, leading to even more popularity for the sport.

In 1971, the first World Series night game took place, which saw over 60 million people watch the game on television. The result was many more national prime time games in broadcast. The 1980′s and 1990′s saw various networks take their turn at baseball broadcasts. CBS, NBC, and ABC all had runs televising the game. ESPN took baseball to a whole new level in the 1990′s, broadcasting weekly games including a Sunday night game of the week.

In 2009, Major League Baseball started its own cable network that would broadcast baseball content year round. Now, baseball can be found on television at any time. Events like the amateur draft are aired on television. Every major league team has its own television contract to broadcast their games. Baseball remains popular in feature films as well, with dozens of hit movies about the game remaining popular to this day.

Baseball History may be ever Changing but some things never Change

11321026496_2010-mlb-world-series-logo.jpgBaseball history, like all history, certainly is ever changing, but some aspects of the game have remained unchanged for well over a half-century. There are a few reasons for this – over time the basic rules of the game have for the most part remained unaltered; the development of essential skills continues to involve an investment of time and personnel by ball clubs; and fans have always flocked to see money players and exciting teams.

In 1976, Major League Baseball (MLB) was changed forever with the birth of free agency. Since its inception, the owners had held power over all players. They could trade anyone at anytime and control, with relative ease, what individuals would be paid. Great players, like Babe Ruth, usually commanded solid salaries but with free agency players were able to negotiate their contracts and to go to a team willing to pay their price.

Still, as it had always been, players had to have the skills a team needed to get their price. The one major difference was that players were now able to sign guaranteed contracts, which stated that they would be paid their salary no matter how they performed and even if they were injured.

Seventy-three years before free agency, professional baseball underwent a change that would influence the way in which the Majors conducted business and found players. In 1903 the National Association of Professional Base Ball Leagues, better known as the Minor Leagues, was formed in order to create some order in which Major League teams acquired players from small market clubs. In the 1930s the great Branch Rickey developed the structure for what we know today as the “Minor Leagues.” Rickey’s formalization of the “Minors,” which became dedicated to developing players who could perform in the Majors, was jokingly called the “farm system” because small town clubs were raising young players “like corn” down on the farm.

Since the 1930s, MLB has relied upon affiliate farm teams to develop players for the big leagues to supply promising prospects for trades, or to simply provide adequate replacements when necessary. Today, the Minor League system is highly developed, bringing players up through A, AA, and AAA ball. When a team is looking to make a trade for a solid Major Leaguer, one way they can sweeten the deal is by including prospects from the minors. Additionally, one way for owners to keep costs down is to bring up players from the “farm team” when they’re ready. By doing this a MLB team can save millions of dollars.

Bringing up an adequate second baseman from the minors and paying him the minimum $327,000 for the season can prove to have more value than paying a veteran infielder 2.5 million dollars. Using a certain number of non-veterans allows a team to spend more money on other positions, especially pitching, which is always at a premium and comes at a high price.

The Minor Leagues have always been a cost-saving venture for clubs but with today’s exorbitant salaries, the strength of the players union, and most clubs carrying payrolls of under one-hundred million dollars, the strategic use of Minor League players can make the difference in both turning a profit and winning the World Series.

Using players from the farm club actually gives owners more power, since those team members who have been brought up are not eligible for salary arbitration until they have three years in the Majors and cannot become free agents until they’ve accumulated six or more years in the big leagues. Today, for a brief part of a player’s career, National and American League owners have the power they used to possess over every player prior to 1976.

Teams looking to win a championship and attract as much revenue as possible have often invested money in key players. Throughout baseball’s history, there have been owners willing to pay more than others. In 1919, some of the Chicago White Sox, which was owned by Charles Comiskey, decided to throw the World Series to their National League counterparts, the Cincinnati Reds.

The White Sox players felt they were both underpaid and under-appreciated by their boss and figured if they bet on the underdog Reds and insured that the National Leaguers would win, they’d make a tidy profit. They did just that, but they also got caught. It became known as the Black Sox Scandal of 1919, and it’s a constant reminder to owners of how a man like Comiskey, who had a whole lot of money, could be penny-wise and pound-foolish.

Of course, spending a lot of money does not insure a team will win the World Series or even the League Championship. Since the New York Yankees payroll exceeded one hundred millions dollars five years ago, they’ve been unable to win it all. The last few years Steinbrenner and company have been handing over two hundred million in team pay. Last year’s champs, the Chicago White Sox, paid out a little over seventy-five million to their players. It was ironic, because they had not won the Series since 1917, prior to the big scandal.

Most analysts agree that a MLB club needs to wisely spend about seventy million to be competitive. That’s why some pundits believe that the Toronto Blue Jays, who reached that magic salary mark this season by adding quality players and about thirty million to their pay roll, are a club to watch.

The basic idea at work regarding salary prior to free agency is that a happy player – one who feels he’s being treated and paid fairly – can equal a happy owner with a winning team. After free agency, the thought became that in order to compete a team had to pay a player what the market dictated and owners, to a degree, had the ability to control that market. These are, in essence, two sides of the same coin.

If we could resurrect Cy Young, Shoeless Joe Jackson, and Home Run Baker and bring them out to the ballpark, they’d certainly still understand the game, even though it has changed. Since their time, there has been the development of specialty pitchers, creation of artificial turf, and the addition of the designated hitter in the American League. The mound, strike zone, and scoreboards are all different too.

Player skills are still fundamentally the same, except more advanced. They would get the idea that a better player should command more money than a player with less skill. But the overall economics of the game would probably baffle those great players. That has added a new type of off-field strategy that owners who want to win must master. Since the turn of the 19th century, it’s been the greatest change MLB has seen.