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Sports league

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Group of sports teams or individual athletes that compete again each other
It has been suggested that this article besplit out into articles titledSports league andAmateur league. (Discuss)(January 2020)

Asports league is a group of individual athletes,sports teams or clubs who form a league to compete against each other and gain points in a specificsport. At its simplest, it may be a local group ofamateur athletes who form teams among themselves and compete periodically, at its most complex, it can be an internationalprofessional league making large amounts of money and involving dozens of teams and thousands of players.[vague][relevant?]

Terminology

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Misuse of term

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Many uses of the term league in sports and for sports organizations are misnomers as the term league relates specifically to the form of organization, requiring persons or bodies to be in league together. A sport competition owned and controlled other than by its participant players, teams or clubs is not a league.[1]

Synonyms

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In many cases, organizations that function as leagues are described using a different term, such asassociation,conference,division,leaderboard, orseries. This is especially common in individual sports, although the term "league" is sometimes used in amateur individual sports such asgolf.[2]

The term "league" is also sometimes applicable to competitions that would more traditionally be calledtournaments, such as theUEFA Champions League, which is organized with multiple small round-robin competitions followed by a single elimination tournament to choose an overall winner.

Leagues and league systems

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"League" and its synonyms may be used to encompass either a single competition or a related group of competitions.

Many groups usepromotion and relegation, where the best-ranked team(s) in thelowerdivision arepromoted to thehigher division for the next season, and the worst-ranked team(s) in thehigher division arerelegated to thelower division for the next season. Under this system, "league" may refer both to aleague system, a group of leagues that are tied together in a hierarchical fashion by promotion and relegation, and to the individual leagues within the league system. For example, inEnglish association football, theEnglish Football League (EFL) is a league system, while the term "National League" refers both tothe league immediately below the EFL in the English pyramid and toits associated league system.

An alternate system of league organization which is used primarily in Australia, Canada, and the United States is a closed model which always has the same teams playing, with occasional admission ofexpansion teams andrelocation of existing teams. There is no team movement between the highermajor league and the lowerminor leagues.

In many of these closed-model leagues in Canada and the United States, they are divided into subdivisions on historical or geographical lines. These may be referred to asconferences ordivisions. For example, theNational Football League (NFL) is divided into theNational Football Conference andAmerican Football Conference; the latter conference was formed largely from the remnants of theAmerican Football League after itmerged with the NFL, though it now contains three original NFL teams and three expansion teams. Both theNational Basketball Association (NBA) andNational Hockey League (NHL) are divided into Eastern and Western Conferences. The conferences in the NFL, NBA, and NHL are further divided into subsets, all of which are calleddivisions. These are geographically based, and teams play their divisional opponents more than any others, and then play the other clubs in their conference more than their non-conference opponents.

Baseball has a unique nomenclature, with "Major League Baseball" (MLB) the name of the overall grouping of 30 teams in two "major leagues", theAmerican League (AL) and the olderNational League (NL). They are titled leagues rather than conferences for several reasons. The National League predates the American by 25 years and was considered a "major" league in comparison to its early competitors, and in a sense it simply extended this recognition to the AL, the only league of similar financial clout. In addition, the leagues played no interlocking schedule of any kind until 1995, and then added only a small amount ofinterleague play, with the main AL-NL competition occurring between their champions in theWorld Series. Thus the two leagues played mostly separate competitions within the larger framework of MLB. Finally, until 2000, they were actually separate legal entities, unlike the conferences of other leagues.Nippon Professional Baseball in Japan has a similar history, with theCentral League andPacific League not founded together.

Due to this naming custom, it is common to use slightly different terms to discuss MLB. Where someone might refer to "the bestquarterback in the league" and be understood to mean the overall NFL, a similar mention of "the bestoutfielder in the league" is almost always a reference to the Americanor National League, while "in all of baseball" or similar is used to denote the larger status. Each of the major leagues also has its ownset of awards to recognize the separation between the two, which means there are twoMVPs, twoCy Young Award winners, etc. Since its name is constructed differently—a description of the status of two leagues rather than the title of one—it is common to hear "MLB" without "the" attached to it, as in "the most home runs in MLB this year", since one would not say "the Major League Baseball".

League organization

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The common thread between all sports leagues is a structure that allows teams or individuals to compete against each other in a nonrandom order on a set schedule, usually called aseason, with the results of the individual competitions being used to name an overall champion.A league championship may be contested in a number of ways. Each team may play every other team a certain number of times in around-robin tournament. Usually, teams play an equal number of games or matches at their own stadium and at other teams', becausehome advantage is a major factor in many sports. When teams competing for a tournament championship do not play the same teams the same number of times, it is known as an unbalanced schedule.

In such a set-up, the team with the best record becomes champion, based on either a strict win–loss–tie system or on a points system where a certain number of points are awarded for a win, loss, or tie, while bonus points might also be added for teams meeting various criteria. Many leagues also useplayoffs, where after teams compete in a regular season in a league format, the top teams (possibly determined by conference or division) advance to the playoffs. In some such leagues having the best regular season record is relatively unimportant, though top-seeded teams in some leagues, such as theNFL, can gain byes to later rounds of the playoffs, and teams finishing with the best records usually have the advantage of playing the weakest teams that have advanced to the playoffs.

Alternatives to traditional league organization

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While round-robin and modified round-robin competitions are the most common form of league organization, there are a number of ways to organize a sporting competition, almost all of which may be described as a "league". Many sports organizations fall on a continuum between a total lack of organization, as in a pick-up game, and a formal league such as is common at the highest level of professional team sports.

Non-league sports

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The simplest form of competition is to allow teams to play each other whenever they see fit. In some sports, such ashorse racing, the main goal of the entrants is to win individualpurses, and there is little or no ranking or competition outside winning certain major races. A small amount of league organization may be imposed on these non-league sports by way of a series ortournament tying several individual events together, such as theTriple Crown.

Even in team sports that normally use a traditional league format, some teams often exist outside any league; these teams are generally known asbarnstorming teams and either schedule games against local professional or amateur competition or bring their own competition, such as the barnstormingHarlem Globetrotters did when they toured with theWashington Generals. As with the Globetrotters, barnstorming teams sometimes emphasize spectacle over athletic competition.

In Europe, the term "cup competition" is used to describesingle elimination orknock-out tournaments, where the pairing of teams in each round is determined by a "draw" (see for example, theFA Cup in England), to distinguish it from league competition, in which every club in theleague or division plays the other teams a pre-determined number of times in a season, usually on a home and away basis.

Further, in England, the termnon-league football is used for historical reasons to describeassociation football teams that play in organized leagues, but not in theEnglish Football League orPremier League, the two highest levels of competition in that sport in that country.

Independent baseball is used similarly in the United States to describebaseball teams that play in leagues other than those sanctioned byMajor League Baseball. These teams do play in leagues and should not be confused with barnstorming teams that play truly non-league schedules.

Rankings and leaderboards

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Individual sports often use an alternative type of league organization where competitors are ranked against each other. In the simplest cases, such asboxing, the rankings mean little and the major competition is to crown a champion in a title fight.

In other sports, the rankings and leaderboards gain importance when they are used inseeding tournaments.

In some sports, points are assigned to results at individual competitions, and the resulting points are used to generate a season rankings and determine the season champion. While not usually referred to as "leagues", but "tours" or "series", these season-long competitions with set events are very similar to league structures in team sports. Examples of this aremotorsport,tennis,golf,skiing,beach volleyball andrugby sevens.

Conferences and informal leagues

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Americancollege sports are traditionally organized into groups of teams known asconferences.[3] These conferences ordinarily keep league tables and crown champions within the conference, as other sports leagues do, but the individual schools also schedule a certain number of "non-conference" games that are organized independently between two schools in different conferences, or between a conference team and a non-conference team. Also, national championships in some college sports, such as football, are or were traditionally decided by an external poll, rather than a designated championship.

Round-robin sports leagues

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Most major team sports play some form of round-robin schedule, where the goal is for each team to play a relatively balanced schedule with each other team in the league or in its league subdivision. Within this structure, there are a few significant differences between leagues, a few of which are set forth below.

Single-table versus unbalanced schedule

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The simplest way to organize a sports league, and still one of the most common, is in a double round-robin format where each team plays each other team twice, once at home and once away. This ensures that every team plays an equally difficult schedule and that no team has unduehome field advantage. This organization is still used in many team sports around the world.

One potential drawback of this simple double round-robin format is that the number of teams in the league determines the schedule. Larger leagues may not be able to play as many games as such a system would require, and smaller leagues may want more games. In addition, leagues whose teams are geographically spread out over a wide area (a common situation for leagues in North America) may face significant travel costs. One solution is to play an unbalanced schedule, with some teams playing additional games against some other teams; this is the wayMajor League Soccer has traditionally been scheduled, with the additional games being played against local rivals. Some leagues also break the league into subunits, often known asdivisions andconferences, each of which may itself play a balanced or unbalanced schedule.

Central venue leagues

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A "central venue league" (CVL) is a sports league where all the fixtures take place at the same venue, instead of rotating around the venues of the 'home' team, for each fixture. SeveralUK basketball leagues operate on this basis, intended to keep the costs of participation as low as possible,[4] including:

Cups, tournaments, and playoffs

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Many sports leagues also participate in a single-elimination tournament each year. In the United States, Mexico, and some other countries, these tournaments are commonly called "playoffs" and are played at the end of the season, with the teams qualifying for the playoffs based on their performance during the season. In Europe, "cup" competitions are more common, with all teams playing in a single-elimination tournament that takes place during and parallel with the regular season.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Oxford dictionary
  2. ^"A Golf League of Their Own".businessweek.com. Archived fromthe original on 2009-12-23.
  3. ^Some conferences, though, useleague instead ofconference in their names.About The Ivy LeagueArchived 2011-09-03 at theWayback Machine. The Ivy League official website. Council of Ivy Group Presidents. Retrieved 2011-09-05.
  4. ^abCommunity Basketball League,About the Community Basketball League', accessed 11 July 2020
  5. ^Newcastle Eagles Community Foundation,15 Years of the Central Venue League, published 2 November 2017, accessed 11 July 2020

Further reading

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