Commissioner Bud Selig said Saturday he's in favor of some realignment of baseball's divisions. "I've always believed in realignment, we've done a lot in the last 18 years. But we really have not discussed that subject," Selig said. "It's a subject that's been in my mind for a long time, but is there anything really to report? No. I know there have been some stories but they're way ahead of where we are -- way ahead." A recent story by SI.com's Tom Verducci suggested that Selig's 14-member Special Committee for On-Field Matters was discussing the concept of "floating realignment." Reportedly under this concept, clubs would not be assigned to a fixed division, but could shift divisions year to year, based on geography, payroll and their perceptions of whether they were contending teams. No team would be able to move to a time zone more than two hours apart from its own. "I do believe in some realignment because I do believe it can work, just as I believed in the Wild Card, Interleague Play, revenue sharing," Selig said. "It's something that I want to keep thinking about. When I'm on long airplane rides and travels, which are a lot lately, I'll fiddle around with divisions and things. But one thing about it, you can come up with a hundred different [scenarios]. So we'll just see how it works out."