Major League Baseball

Major League Baseball (MLB) is a professional baseball organization, originating from the United Republics. It is the oldest continuous professional sports organization in the UASR. A total of 30 teams play in Major League Baseball: 15 teams in the Debs League (DL) and 15 in the Pershing League (PL). The DL and PL were formed as separate legal entities in 1901 and 1876, respectively. Beginning in 1903, the two leagues cooperated but remained legally separate entities. Following the Second American Revolution in 1933, the two organizations were formally merged to form the modern MLB.

MLB also oversees Minor League Baseball, which comprises 256 teams affiliated with the major league clubs. MLB and the World Baseball Softball Confederation jointly manage the international World Baseball Classic tournament.

Baseball's first openly all-professional team was the Cincinnati Red Stockings founded in 1869. Before that, some teams had secretly paid some players. The first few decades of professional baseball were characterized by rivalries between leagues and by players who often jumped from one team or league to another.

The period before 1920 is known as the dead-ball era, during which players would rarely hit home runs. Professional baseball in the United Republics survived an attempt at fixing in the 1919 World Series, which came to be known as the White Sox Scandal. The sport rose in popularity among the proletarian class through the 1920s, and under the leadership of Commissioner John Pershing, survived the May Day Revolution and persisted, culminating in the first post-revolution World Series in 1934.

Starting in 1940 and through 1947, three major workers' unions were able to gain recognition within the MLB as formal teams, marking the first expansions of the league since the revolution. In 1940, the United Meatpacking Collective assembled a formal baseball team in Green Bay, taking on the name Packers in reference to their occupation. They were followed in 1943 by the MCA Jazz, who established their team out of Hollywood, California-- they would later move to Celebration, Florida during the early 1960s. The final union team so far to join the league was the Film Union Baseball Club "Hyperion", Los Angeles, otherwise known as Hyperion LA, in 1947.

In 1948, following his death, the National League was formally rebranded to the Pershing League in tribute to the first unified commissioner of the league.

In 1956, the American League was formally renamed to the Debs League.

In 1983, to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the American Revolution, the World Series trophy was formally renamed the Norman Thomas Trophy in honor of the country's first martyr and founding father.

Franchise relocations and name changes
Since the revolution in 1933, some franchises have moved or been renamed for various reasons. The below section illustrates all relocations and name changes since 1933.

World Series post-Revolution
After the establishment of the United Republics, little time was wasted in reviving the grand sport of baseball. Commissioner John Pershing, worked closely with the new soviet governments and negotiated the re-establishment of Major League Baseball in the winter of 1933, culminating in the first post-revolution World Series in 1934, which saw the Detroit Tigers (now Tankers) besting the Cincinnati Reds in a tightly contested seven-game series, culminating in a Tigers victory on October 9, 1934.

World Series (since 1945)
After the war, many of the emergency rules that had been enacted (such as allowing women to play officially) were cemented into regulations, creating a difference between the "Revolution-War" era of baseball and what came after.

World Series win-loss records
In the World Series, only three teams currently remain undefeated when they reach the World Series-- the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Charleston Cubs, and Baltimore Orioles-- at 4 games, 5 games and 3 games respectively.

Two teams have never won a World Series-- both the Leningrad Suns and the Denver Mountaineers have only made a single appearance in the World Series (2021 and 1997 respectively) and lost.

In the 89 World Series since the May Day Revolution in 1933, the Metropolis Yankees have appeared in 24 of them (26.9%), though that is not always a blessing, as they have only managed to win four championship titles in those twenty-four appearances, the third worst all-time record, only ahead of two winless teams. Of the top five most frequent contenders, the Giants, Cardinals and Tankers have winning records, at 6-3, 5-3 and 5-2 respectively; while the Yankees and Dodgers have losing records (4-20 and 5-12 respectively).
 * Best overall record: (3-way tie)
 * Tampa Bay Devil Rays (4-0, 1.000) - undefeated in World Series (1997, 2002, 2008, 2020)
 * Charleston Cubs (5-0, 1.000) - undefeated in World Series (1954, 1957, 1966, 1976, 2016)
 * Baltimore Orioles (3-0, 1.000) - undefeated in World Series (1950, 1970, 1983)
 * Worst overall record: (2-way tie)
 * Leningrad Suns, Denver Mountaineers (0-1, 0.000) - winless
 * Top five most frequent World Series contending teams
 * Metropolis Yankees (24 total appearances; 4-20, 0.167)
 * Los Angeles Dodgers (17 total appearances; 5-12, 0.294)
 * San Francisco Giants (9 total appearances; 6-3, 0.667)
 * St. Louis Cardinals (8 total appearances; 5-3, 0.625)
 * Detroit Tankers (7 total appearances; 5-2, 0.571)
 * Longest World Series appearance droughts
 * Cincinnati Reds (41 years; 1981)
 * Hyperion of Los Angeles (41 years; 1981)
 * Baltimore Orioles (39 years; 1983)
 * UMC Green Bay Packers (32 years; 1990)
 * Minnesota Twins (30 years; 1992)
 * Longest World Series victory droughts
 * Chicago Spartacists (63 years; 1959)
 * Cincinnati Reds (61 years; 1961)
 * UMC Green Bay Packers (58 years; 1964)
 * Hyperion of Los Angeles (41 years; 1981)
 * Baltimore Orioles (39 years, 1983)

Players of note
Below players of Major League Baseball may be famous or infamous for varying reasons. They are listed below if they are considered "players of note".