There's nothing to disagree or agree with. It's simple math. You might've missed it, but I acknowledged the disadvantage that the wild cards are at in the current system. http://northsidebaseball.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=3252465#p3252465 Once you're past that round, everyone's chances are roughly 1/8. A little more than that for the stronger teams and a little less for the weaker teams, but all the teams being pretty good means even the margin there isn't as much as you might want to think. OK. I did miss that. Fair enough. So, part of the playoffs are a crapshoot more than the entire thing. That appears to be accurate, right? And I'm asking sincerely for my own knowledge. The entire thing. The new format just made it harder for the wild cards, that's all. It was a crap shoot before and it's still a crap shoot, except now there are two wild cards (per league) with a roughly 50/50 chance of being one of the 8 in the regular playoffs instead of just one that gets right in with the rest of the teams. One last thing and I promise I'm out. There have only been six wild card teams to win the World Series since the wild card first started in 1995. There were five wild card teams to win from 1994 to 2011, when each wild card didn't have to first play a 50-50 game. Doesn't the math suggest that, percentage-wise, it's tougher to win the World Series as a wild card even before the invention of the play-in game? Now, I'm the worst person ever at math, so if I look like an idiot, I won't be surprised.