Haesanite National League: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 99: | Line 99: | ||
|Coastal | |Coastal | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Central | |Central | ||
|Plains | |Plains | ||
|Valley | |Valley | ||
|- | |- | ||
|North | |North | ||
|Mountain | |Mountain | ||
|Gulf | |Gulf | ||
| Line 146: | Line 146: | ||
=== 1914-1935: Origins === | === 1914-1935: Origins === | ||
Baseball had been played in Haesan from the late 19th century, when factory workers found the pastime more accessible than the cricket favored by the wealthy colonial elite. As a result, as with association football, rivalries between factory teams drove most of baseball's early popularity in Haesan. Soon formalized city-based leagues started to pop up, and eventually the governing associations of these leagues would form all-star teams and compete against the best from other cities. In 1914, the leaders of the city-wide associations of Suyang, Anfa, Sinju, Hyangsan, Anmi, and Jeonyu met to formalize rules about these competitions, and the Haesan National League was born out of these discussions. | |||
This move galvanized the interest in baseball, as new stadiums could be financed with the revenues from formalized ball clubs, and lay viewership of baseball games increased as a result. During the First Commonwealth, as Haesanites gained more access to the wealth from its manufacturing and ports after the ouster of the colonial government, going to the ballpark became a popular middle class recreational activity. The 1920s saw a burst of power hitting that made the sport faster paced and more exciting than its alternatives, further driving interest in the game. | |||
=== 1936-1962: Merger and Government Support === | === 1936-1962: Merger and Government Support === | ||
In 1926, the Haesan Baseball Organization also was a popular baseball league, and in the mid 1930s as the economy turned south, the leagues decided that they could not withstand the economic competition and decided to merge. Condensing out the Baseball Organization's teams that were in the same markets, the HNL explanded from 6 teams to 10. After the April Coup in 1942, military rule came to Haesan, and the government decided that sports fandom was a useful tool to keep the populace happy and less concerned with politics. As a result, the government heavily funded the HNL, and financed the construction of new stadiums, investment in domestically manufactured equipment to world-class standards, and financed the HNL All-Star team to represent Haesan at international competitions. As a result, during the reign of the Free Republic, baseball became akin to a national sport, with a lot of pride and energy going into supporting its growth. | |||
=== 1963-1970: HNL during the Great War === | === 1963-1970: HNL during the Great War === | ||
However, with the Darya-Slokasian invasion in 1963, the energy came coming to a crashing halt. The 1963 HNL season was suspended, and after Haesan was leveled by 3 years of fighting, the league was unable to immediately restart. The Maximusian provisional government had made infrastructure reconstruction its primary priority, and only in 1970 was Haesan re-developed enough to make it feasible for the league to resume. Opening Day of 1970 was widely regarded as one of the key moments in Haesan's reconstruction, and was closely followed by the start of Maximusian plans to return Haesan to self-governing status. | |||
=== 1970-1985: Rebuilding and Reforming === | |||
As Lagarde came back to power in 1972, he once again made baseball a policy priority. The first expansion of the HNL took place in 1973 bumping the league up to 16 teams, and a major rules overhaul was announced alongside it, introducing the baseball league system and the unique promotion and relegation system that is critical to modern Haesanite baseball. This autocratic era also saw major regulations put in place to crack down on performance enhancing drugs, as over a dozen players were arrested in 1983 on suspicion of drug use, and the result was a drastic reduction in offensive play due to fear of blowback. Somewhat quelling this "dead-ball era" was the fact that bans on resin and other pitching aids were also enforced in the name of "Haesanite respectability." The early 80s saw a sharp decline in viewership numbers as fans left for intense rivalries in football. | |||
=== | === 1986-2011: Expansion Era and Cultural Shifts === | ||
However, democratization in October 1985 incidentally led to the development of a baseball culture unique to Haesan. Despite the harsher regulations on substances than most of its peer leagues, players still found ways to show their personal flair, and a fan culture developed as a result. In the late 80s and early 90s, bat-flipping became widespread, and fan chants developed as fan clubs organized cheers to support their favorite players. Starting in the late 90s, official cheer squads started to be formed by the baseball clubs, and by 2005, basically every club in the league had one. Teams also developed increasingly complex traditions and events in order to keep fan engagement high. Additionally, an All-Star Game and home-run competition has been held since 2001 over the winter holiday season in one of Haesan's three indoor stadiums for some off-season entertainment. | |||
These reforms to the culture of the game have made Haesanite baseball far more relaxed and fan-centered than some of its peer leagues like in Xiomera or the Slokais Islands. In Haesan, the fan reaction was immensely positive, and the HNL reacted by instigating successive waves of expansion. In 1990, 8 more teams were added, bringing the league to 24. | |||
=== 2012-present: A Global HNL === | === 2012-present: A Global HNL === | ||
Revision as of 13:25, 31 May 2023
| 해산 야구 리그 | |
| Abbreviation | HNL |
|---|---|
| Formation | 1914 |
| Founded at | Suyang, Haesan |
| Type | Baseball League |
| Headquarters | Suyang, Haesan |
| Website | hnl.hn |
The Haesanite National League is the top flight of Haesanite baseball (야구, or yagu). 32 teams compete for the Astral Cup, the national championship of Haesanite baseball. Two teams are relegated to the Second League at the conclusion of each season, and replaced with the champion and runner-up of the Second League.
League Structure
Since 2010, the National League has been comprised of 32 teams spread across 2 Conferences, the Haesan Conference and the Commonwealth Conference, each with four 4-team divisions. For scheduling purposes, each division has a partner division based on geographic proximity. These pairs of partner divisions are called regions, and all teams in each region will play each other over the course of a season. The team with the best record in each division will advance to the playoffs, while the worst team in each division and the next two teams with the worst record in each conference will enter the relegation playoffs.
| Region | HC Division | CC Division |
|---|---|---|
| Southwest | Bay | Metro |
| Southern Coast | South | Coastal |
| Central | Plains | Valley |
| North | Mountain | Gulf |
Playoff Structure
The team with the best record in the regular season in each division qualifies for a spot in the Astral Cup Playoffs. The qualifying teams in each conference are seeded from one to four depending on their records, with the one seed playing the four seed and the two seed playing the three seed in the Conference Semifinals. The Conference Semifinal rounds are a best-of-three series, alternating games home and away with the higher seeded team gaining home field advantage in the series. The Conference Finals see the winners of the Conference Semifinals face off in a best-of-five series, also alternating games home and away with the higher seeded team gaining home field advantage. The winners of the pennants in the Haesan Conference and the Commonwealth Conference face off in the best-of-seven Astral Series for the Astral Cup, with the team with the better record playing games 1, 2, 5, and 7 at home.
Tiebreaks
The tiebreak structure for determining seeding if teams have equivalent records is as follows:
- Head-to-head record
- Inter-division record
- Inter-region record
- Inter-conference record
- Run differential
- Random chance
If the tie for home field is being decided amongst teams within the same conference, but in different divisions, omit #2 and #3. If the tie is being broken across conferences, omit #4 as well.
Relegation Playoff Structure
Six teams in each conference, the worst team in each division and the next two teams with the worst record, enter the relegation challenge. The two teams in each conference with the worst records go straight to the second round, while the other 8 teams compete in the first round. At the end of the playoffs, two teams will be relegated to the Second League.
First Round
The four teams in each conference competing in the first round are seeded according to their record, and the two teams with the better record get home field advantage for the whole of a three-game series against their paired team. The winning team is safe from relegation, while the losing team proceeds to the second round.
Second Round
The losers of the first round and the two teams with the worst records in each conference are re-seeded, and play a best-of-three at the home field of the team with the better record. As in the first round, the teams that win the series are safe, while those who lose progress to the third round.
Third Round
The losers in the second round from conference are reseeded, so that the team with the better record in each conference plays the team with the worse record in the other conference. The third round is a best-of-three series played at a neutral site determined by lottery. The loser of each of the third round series are relegated.
Scheduling
Each team plays 8 games (4 home, 4 away) against each of its three divisional rivals, 6 games against their four regional opponents (3 home, 3 away), and 4 games against their twelve non-divisional conference opponents (2 home, 2 away). Additionally, teams play one three game series against half of their twelve non-regional non-conference opponents, where the teams are assigned randomly, and home-field for those series is assigned semi-randomly so that each team has the same number of home and away games each season. This means that each team plays 24 inter-division games, 24 inter-regional (but not inter-divisional) games, 48 inter-conference (but not inter-divisional) games, and 18 games against opposite conference opponents not in their region, for a total of 114 regular season games. The season usually starts in April and ends in August, with playoffs starting in September and stretching into October.
HNL Draft
Every year, talented amateur and university players declare for the HNL Draft, held in February every year. Each HNL team is entitled to one pick in the first three rounds, starting with the two newly promoted teams where the Second League champion gets the first overall pick, followed by the Second League runner-up, and then proceeding through the non-relegated HNL teams in order of worst record to best record in the prior season. At least 100 players are selected in the first phase of the draft, as three rounds of this selection order proceed, followed by at least four compensatory picks for teams who had players forced into retirement by injury or teams that had picks voided by relegation. This first phase is followed by a second phase of four rounds, where the 30 Second League teams get to draft players from the remaining talent pool. Those not drafted in the first two phases are free to sign with any team in the league ladder. Rights to draft picks may be freely traded; however, if a newly promoted team had traded away their 4th-7th round draft picks while still in the Second League, those picks do not transfer to the HNL, and the team will be awarded compensatory picks during that round instead. The same is true of newly relegated teams; their HNL draft picks are not converted to Second League picks, but rather the team holding those picks will be awarded compensation instead.
History
1914-1935: Origins
Baseball had been played in Haesan from the late 19th century, when factory workers found the pastime more accessible than the cricket favored by the wealthy colonial elite. As a result, as with association football, rivalries between factory teams drove most of baseball's early popularity in Haesan. Soon formalized city-based leagues started to pop up, and eventually the governing associations of these leagues would form all-star teams and compete against the best from other cities. In 1914, the leaders of the city-wide associations of Suyang, Anfa, Sinju, Hyangsan, Anmi, and Jeonyu met to formalize rules about these competitions, and the Haesan National League was born out of these discussions.
This move galvanized the interest in baseball, as new stadiums could be financed with the revenues from formalized ball clubs, and lay viewership of baseball games increased as a result. During the First Commonwealth, as Haesanites gained more access to the wealth from its manufacturing and ports after the ouster of the colonial government, going to the ballpark became a popular middle class recreational activity. The 1920s saw a burst of power hitting that made the sport faster paced and more exciting than its alternatives, further driving interest in the game.
1936-1962: Merger and Government Support
In 1926, the Haesan Baseball Organization also was a popular baseball league, and in the mid 1930s as the economy turned south, the leagues decided that they could not withstand the economic competition and decided to merge. Condensing out the Baseball Organization's teams that were in the same markets, the HNL explanded from 6 teams to 10. After the April Coup in 1942, military rule came to Haesan, and the government decided that sports fandom was a useful tool to keep the populace happy and less concerned with politics. As a result, the government heavily funded the HNL, and financed the construction of new stadiums, investment in domestically manufactured equipment to world-class standards, and financed the HNL All-Star team to represent Haesan at international competitions. As a result, during the reign of the Free Republic, baseball became akin to a national sport, with a lot of pride and energy going into supporting its growth.
1963-1970: HNL during the Great War
However, with the Darya-Slokasian invasion in 1963, the energy came coming to a crashing halt. The 1963 HNL season was suspended, and after Haesan was leveled by 3 years of fighting, the league was unable to immediately restart. The Maximusian provisional government had made infrastructure reconstruction its primary priority, and only in 1970 was Haesan re-developed enough to make it feasible for the league to resume. Opening Day of 1970 was widely regarded as one of the key moments in Haesan's reconstruction, and was closely followed by the start of Maximusian plans to return Haesan to self-governing status.
1970-1985: Rebuilding and Reforming
As Lagarde came back to power in 1972, he once again made baseball a policy priority. The first expansion of the HNL took place in 1973 bumping the league up to 16 teams, and a major rules overhaul was announced alongside it, introducing the baseball league system and the unique promotion and relegation system that is critical to modern Haesanite baseball. This autocratic era also saw major regulations put in place to crack down on performance enhancing drugs, as over a dozen players were arrested in 1983 on suspicion of drug use, and the result was a drastic reduction in offensive play due to fear of blowback. Somewhat quelling this "dead-ball era" was the fact that bans on resin and other pitching aids were also enforced in the name of "Haesanite respectability." The early 80s saw a sharp decline in viewership numbers as fans left for intense rivalries in football.
1986-2011: Expansion Era and Cultural Shifts
However, democratization in October 1985 incidentally led to the development of a baseball culture unique to Haesan. Despite the harsher regulations on substances than most of its peer leagues, players still found ways to show their personal flair, and a fan culture developed as a result. In the late 80s and early 90s, bat-flipping became widespread, and fan chants developed as fan clubs organized cheers to support their favorite players. Starting in the late 90s, official cheer squads started to be formed by the baseball clubs, and by 2005, basically every club in the league had one. Teams also developed increasingly complex traditions and events in order to keep fan engagement high. Additionally, an All-Star Game and home-run competition has been held since 2001 over the winter holiday season in one of Haesan's three indoor stadiums for some off-season entertainment.
These reforms to the culture of the game have made Haesanite baseball far more relaxed and fan-centered than some of its peer leagues like in Xiomera or the Slokais Islands. In Haesan, the fan reaction was immensely positive, and the HNL reacted by instigating successive waves of expansion. In 1990, 8 more teams were added, bringing the league to 24.
2012-present: A Global HNL
Teams
| Division | Team | City | Stadium | Capacity | First Season | Current Spell | Last Cup |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haesan Conference | |||||||
| Bay | Hanyeong Navigators | Hanyeong, Sinhan | Global Maritime Park | 43,388 | 1936 | 1936– | 2005 |
| Seoyeon Supernova | Seoyeon, Sinhan | Atlas Park | 28,963 | 2010 | 2017– | — | |
| Sinju Ghosts | Sinju, Sinhan | Suri Motors Field | 55,673 | 1914 | 1914– | 2021 | |
| Suyang Sol | Suyang, Suyang | Seollim Sky Dome | 62,140 | 1990 | 1992– | 2001 | |
| Mountain | Anfa Alouettes | Anfa, Anfa | Delaporte Arena | 42,670 | 1973 | 1973– | 1978 |
| Haseon Frost | Haseon, Seocheon | Seorae Park | 23,991 | 2019 | 2019– | — | |
| Levesque Lions | Levesque, Northlands | Mirae Financial Stadium | 51,271 | 1973 | 1977– | 1994 | |
| Sanri Mountaineers | Sanri, Maehwa | Cheonpung Park | 37,197 | 1936 | 1988– | — | |
| Plains | Gyeongseong Gulls | Gyeongseong, Ryujang | Haeyang Field | 47,199 | 1936 | 1995– | 2000 |
| Haebam Lunas | Junyeol, Haebam | Astra Telecom Field | 26,496 | 2010 | 2010– | — | |
| Hwagang Regents | Hwagang, Hwagang CR | Haesan National Field | 52,010 | 1973 | 1973– | 1952 | |
| Lemonnier Lightning | Lemonnier, Lemonnier | Montclair Park | 28,283 | 1990 | 2001– | — | |
| South | Anmi Aviators | Anmi, Namhae | Boheom Insurance Park | 43,979 | 1914 | 1914– | 1982 |
| Bridgeport Ironmen | Bridgeport, Northern Maritimes | Air Maritimes Field | 35,662 | 1990 | 1993– | — | |
| Hapyeol Hawks | Hapyeol, Imyu | Gwangbok Field | 26,174 | 2019 | 2019– | — | |
| Jeonyu Towers | Jeonyu, Imyu | SBS Stadium | 49,812 | 1914* | 1981– | 2019 | |
| Commonwealth Conference | |||||||
| Coastal | Anmi Rockets | Anmi, Namhae | Saerom Park | 39,455 | 1990 | 2002– | 2020 |
| Sinju Crecent | Sinju, Sinhan | Suryu Stadium | 43,898 | 1990 | 1990– | — | |
| Suyang Pearls | Suyang, Suyang | Seollim Sky Dome | 62,140 | 1914 | 2017– | 1980 | |
| Yeocheon Eagles | Yeocheon, Namhae | Rōš ut Bernei Park | 34,298 | 1936 | 1975– | 2017 | |
| Gulf | Anfa Ironclads | Anfa, Anfa | Suri Heavy Industry Park | 60,070 | 1973 | 1977– | 1981 |
| Anfa Stars | Anfa, Anfa | Star Stadium | 57,884 | 1914 | 1914– | 2022 | |
| Myeongsa Polar Bears | Myeongsa, Northlands | Bulsajo Stadium | 20,086 | 2021 | 2021– | — | |
| Varenne Vintners | Varenne, Vernier | Fontenay Field | 25,339 | 2022 | 2022– | — | |
| Metro | Ashley Laurels | Ashley, Namhae | Seongwon Park | 23,659 | 2023 | 2023– | — |
| Munseong Tide | Munseong, Namhae | Haebyeon Field | 41,283 | 1990 | 1997– | 2003 | |
| Seowon Gondoliers | Seowon, Sugang | Geumjin Field | 32,480 | 2010 | 2012– | — | |
| Suyang Light | Suyang, Suyang | HS Entertainment Field | 48,761 | 1990 | 1999– | 2010 | |
| Valley | Apseong Armory | Apseong, Sugang | Geonseong Park | 38,682 | 2010 | 2018– | — |
| Eungang Rapids | Imae, Eungang | Narae Park | 34,973 | 1990 | 2004– | 2015 | |
| Hyangsan Blossoms | Hyangsan, Sugang | Jinju Stadium | 55,129 | 1914 | 1983– | 2008 | |
| Jeongseon Jade | Jeongseon, Maehwa | Jeongseok Field | 21,092 | 2020 | 2023– | — | |