I'm going to stop now.
The Pacific League was:
The top two teams in 1954 were the Chunichi Dragons (86(4)40 .683) followed by the Yomiuri Giants (82(1)47 .636).
Where did you get two Dragons from? Yomiuri's team has only been called the "Tokyo Kyojin" from 1936 to 1946 and the "Yomiuri Giants" from 1947 to present according to Baseball Magazine Sha's yearly Record Books.
Chunichi is a competing newspaper to the Yomiuri Shinbun. Perhaps that's what you were thinking of?
Also, I believe a possible failure for a baseball World Cup would be the depth of world wide talent. I'm not saying it's a good idea, but I don't think it would catch on like the football World Cup. The cricket World Cup involves around twelve teams with only about 5 of them being competitive with the rest only making up the numbers which is a real bore.
I doubt the depth would be a huge issue. First of all, depth isn't that critical a setup like this. Three starting pitchers plus good starters at the eight positions (nine if a DH is used) plus one or two pinch hitting types would fill the key roles. You don't have to build a team for the long haul. Front line talent carries the day.]
The April 28, 2003 Sports Illustrated (page 66) has four excellent teams (US, Japan, Dominican, and Puerto Rico), and if Mexico or Venezuela have a stud pitcher somewhere, they could cause havoc. Venezuela would have Alex Cabrera and Bobby Abreu to give them some punch, and Canada with Larry Walker should be able to field a decent team. Taiwan and Korea would have no trouble fielding teams that if yoked to a stud pitcher would be real threats to win when that guy was on the mound.
I know not all these countries would have that stud pitcher, but when you've only got to come up with one or two to be competitive, the chances are good that some of them would pull it off. You'd have at least six teams that could beat anybody in a given game, and at least 3-4 who would have legitimate chances to win the thing.
It would be a great place to showcase talents from NPB, Korea, Taiwan, Venezuela, and the Mexican Leagues, to name a few, and I can easily see most countries getting juiced for the game against the USA. Korea versus Japan would be a rivalry, and I would think bragging rights among the Hispanic countries would be a big deal. The ingredients are there for a good tournament.
Jim Albright
This is a site about Pro Yakyu (Japanese Baseball), not about who the next player to go over to MLB is. It's a community of Pro Yakyu fans who have come together to share their knowledge and opinions with the world. It's a place to follow teams and individuals playing baseball in Japan (and Asia), and to learn about Japanese (and Asian) culture through baseball.
It is my sincere hope that once you learn a bit about what we're about here that you will join the community of contributors.
Michael Westbay
(aka westbaystars)
Founder
Traditional Ground Rules: Have 144 games scheduled. No designated hitters, and lower the mound.
New Ground Rules: 25 Man Rosters. Teams east of the Mississippi River will be in the American League, west of the river will be in the National League, and the Japanese league remains on its current setup. Have mostly inter-division league play like the current MLB schedule.
When the Japanese teams travel to the U.S./Canada, or the U.S./Canada teams travel to Japan, the teams would have to have at least a couple of days off due to traveling and to recover from jet lag. Games would have to be taped for the visiting teams to watch the games in prime time. The amount games would decrease, but the time frame due to days off would be about the same for North Americans.
The playoffs would be longer, and we would have a true World Champion.