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Encyclopedia > League Championship Series

The League Championship Series is the official name for a round of playoffs in Major League Baseball. It matches up the winners of the Division Series, and its winners advance to the World Series.


The League Championship Series was promulgated in 1969, when both the National League and the American League increased in size from ten teams to twelve with the addition, via expansion, of the Montreal Expos and San Diego Padres to the former and the Kansas City Royals and Seattle Pilots to the latter. Concomitant with this, both leagues formed Eastern and Western Divisions, the first-place teams from which faced off in the series.


Originally, the League Championship Series were best -of-five, but were lengthened to best-of-seven in 1985. Since 1995, the League Championship series has matched up the winners of the Division Series, which was added when both leagues formed three divisions, the winners thereof plus one wild card team in each league participating in the latter series, which is a best-of-five (this change was actually supposed to take place in 1994, but postseason play was not held in that year due to a players' strike).


Until 1998, the home-field advantage in the League Championship Series was allocated on a rotating basis between the two (and from 1995 through 1997, among the three) division champions; since 1998 the team with the better record has had this advantage, except that in no case can the wild card ever secure the odd home game regardless of regular-season records.


The League Championship Series is often referred to - particularly in journalistic circles - by its initials, LCS.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
American League Championship Series - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (816 words)
In Major League Baseball, the American League Championship Series (ALCS), played in October, is a playoff round that determines the winner of the American League pennant.
The winner of the series advances to play the winner of the National League Championship Series in baseball's championship, the World Series.
In 1994, the league was restructured into three divisions, with the three division winners and a wild-card team advancing to a best-of-five playoff round, known as the American League Division Series or ALDS.
National League Championship Series - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (962 words)
A structured playoff series began in 1969, when both the National and American Leagues were reorganized into two divisions each, East and West.
In 1981, a divisional series was held due to split-season caused by strike action.
In 1994, the league was restructured into three divisions, with the three division winners and a wild-card team advancing to a best-of-five playoff round, the National League Division Series (NLDS).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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