I went ahead and voted no, and basically it amounts to the same argument I brought up when people starting quoting the sour grapes that dude started spouting over at the Brewers board. Baseball has 162 games. 162. Regardless of breaks, I firmly believe that a crew of umpires calling games to the best of their ability and privately being held accountable for bad calls will allow the best and worst teams to reach their fair and deserved spots in the standings come playoff time. Yes, San Diego got screwed on that final play, but it's their own fault they were playing in a 1-game playoff, and it's their own fault that the 2-run lead they gained in the top of the 13th disappeared. As for the part of the original post which suggested limited replay and possibly for post-season only, it sounds great in theory and is a concept with which I whole-heartedly agree, but it's not a very logical solution. First, the replay system would need a full season of use in order to get the kinks worked out for the post season - something like that wouldn't just appear and immediately start working with optimum efficiency or without any technical difficulties. Second, for the number of post-season games played, the number of infamous blown calls from the umpire is relatively small. Yes, I believe it would be fair if there were replay reversing the homerun call in the NYY-Bal game or the play at first in the 80's WS (between the Royals and Cards, I believe, but I could be mistaken), but I also believe that such plays are infrequent enough that, even given the magnitude and impact associated with these plays, the cost and headache that comes with instant replay doesn't make sense. (Bartman play intentionally left out - I don't think it would deserve a replay, even if the system were already instituted and perfected by then.) Also, in football, one reason replay makes sense is because of the amount of action. With all the penalties that crew has to look for in middle of 22 people on a play which could develop any way at any pace, it's easy for someone to miss something. In baseball, if there's no ball, there's no play. (Exception: plays such as the interference play on Uribe, which defers both to the frequency argument and to the fact that the umpires got that play exactly right following deliberation.) The added benefit simply does not outweigh the cost.