It depends. If the tie is between two teams fighting for one playoff spot, then they play a one-game playoff (in the AL). In the NL, they used to do three-game playoff, but I think that has changed since the advent of the wild card - I believe it is now just one game but I'm not 100% on that. The playoff game counts as a regular-season game.
However, if they're tied but both teams would advance to the postseason - say, they were tied for the lead in the NL west, but their record would also earn them the wild card slot - then head-to-head record is used as the tiebreaker to determine who is seeded as a division champ and who is seeded as a wild card.
go to http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/standings/
Go to this link for the current standings.http://www.nfl.com/standings
here ya go http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/standings/mlb_standings_2001_season.jsp
Nationals
No. Only regular season games are included in the standings. Exhibition games are not. Playoff games have their own standings.
The Yankees standings will change almost daily. Click on the link below for the updated MLB standings.
yes it has standings and scores of all of the mlb in 1 clik
You can find any ruling in the Official MLB Rules. These rules are available for download at the official MLB website.
The St. Louis Cardinals had the best regular season record in 2005, going 100-62. http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/standings/index.jsp?ymd=20051002 (full standings for 2005)
Click on the 'MLB Rules' link below to access the MLB Rule book from mlb.com.
I think the MLB was first called the MLB in 1845 when Alexander Cartwright made called it that and made the first rules of the game
The abbreviation "W C" in the daily MLB standings stands for "Wild Card." It refers to the team's position in the race for a Wild Card playoff spot in addition to their regular divisional standing.