With Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred stating that he’d like to see the league ultimately expand to 32 teams, ideas began to circulate of how baseball would look with the injection of two new franchises.

With Manfred alluding to having eight divisions comprised of four teams, and cities like Nashville, Portland, Las Vegas, and Montreal being tossed around as potential MLB expansion cities, the fundamental and geographical landscapes of baseball would be changing beneath our feet.

It got us to thinking: how would we re-arrange each division to help MLB usher in a new era of baseball? Find out which two cities made the cut as we put our best foot forward with our MLB expansion and realignment ideas.

AL East

Teams: Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox, New York Yankees, Toronto Blue Jays

Longest flight: Toronto to Boston (1 hour, 45 minutes)

The new-look AL East ditches the geographical outlier Tampa Bay Rays and in turn becomes MLB’s most pain-free travel divisions. Fear not, for the Yankees/Red Sox divisional rivalry is preserved here. Come on, is there any way we were going to interfere with perhaps the most storied rivalry in all of sports?

The new division is still comprised of three of the AL East’s original members from when the division was created in 1969. Plus, we also keep the Blue Jays who have been in the division since the club’s inception in 1977. This preserves divisional history and tradition, with all four clubs having won at least two World Series titles while playing in the AL East. Long-touted as baseball’s toughest division, the stakes get even higher with how much more close-knit this division becomes.

AL North

Teams: Chicago White Sox, Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers, Minnesota Twins

Longest flight: Minneapolis to Cleveland (2 hours)

The American League’s newest division is a rebranding of the old AL Central, while shedding the Kansas City Royals. Although the AL Central was an easily navigable division to begin with, now no divisional trip will take longer than two hours.

With a pedigree of boasting pennant-winning teams, the AL North will boast three clubs that have reached the World Series in the past eight seasons (Tigers in 2012, Royals in 2015, Indians in 2016).

With tons of promising young talent coming through these four organizations, everyone will be eager to know who will be the King in the North.

Click ahead to Page 2 to see who will be in the new-look AL West and the brand new AL South in our MLB expansion & realignment plans!