I think it is more likely they just cut from rookie ball. It's either you are good enough to play for A-short or you are stuck playing in the lower tier rookie ball until you are ready.
The NWL was mentioned in one of the pieces I read and I found a NYTimes piece that gives a list of teams on the prospective chopping block and it includes Salem-Kaizer and Tri-City out of the NWL. The league is already only 8 teams. I don't think it would survive properly as a 6-team league.
The apparent cut list is found at a Ny Times piece (
you can sign up for a free account to read the piece, but it offers little insight beyond the list itself, which is awkwardly sorted alphabetically by the team's city/location name and not by league or MLB affiliate):
Eastern League (AA) (would be reduced to 10 teams)
Binghamton Rumble Ponies (NY Mets)
Erie SeaWolves (Detroit Tigers)
Southern League (AA) (would be reduced to 8 teams)
Chattanooga Lookouts (Cincinnati Reds)
Jackson Generals (Arizona Diamondbacks)
Florida State League (A+) (would be reduced to 10 teams)
Daytona Tortugas (Cincinnati Reds)
Florida Fire Frogs (Atlanta Braves)
California League (A+) (would be reduced to 7 teams)
Lancaster Jethawks (Colorado Rockies
Carolina League (A+)
(would be reduced to 9 teams)
Frederick Keys (Baltimore Orioles)
South Atlantic League (A) (would be reduced to 10 teams)
Hagerstown Suns (Washington Nationals)
Lexington Legends (KC Royals)
West Virginia Power (Seattle Mariners)
Midwest League (A) (Would be reduced to 13 teams)
Burlington Bees (LA Angels)
Clinton Lumber Kings (Miami Marlins)
Quad Cities River Bandits (Houston Astros)
NY Penn League (short A) (would be reduced to 6 teams)
Auburn Doubledays (Washington Nationals)
Batavia Muckdogs (Miami Marlins)
Connecticut Tigers (Detroit Tigers)
Lowell Spinners (Boston Red Sox)
Mahoning Valley Scrappers (Cleveland Indians)
State College Spikes (St. Louis Cardinals)
Staten Island Yankees (NY Yankees)
Williamsport Crosscutters (Philadelphia Phillies)
Northwest League (short A) (would be reduced to 6 teams)
Salem-Keizer Volcanoes (SF Giants)
Tri-City Dust Devils (SD Padres)
Pioneer League (Rookie+) (would be eliminated entirely)
Billings Mustangs (Cincinnati Reds)
Grand Junction Rockies (Colorado Rockies)
Great Falls Voyagers (Chicago White Sox)
Idaho Falls Chuckers (KC Royals)
Missoula PaddleHeads (Arizona Diamondbacks)
Ogden Raptors (LA Dodgers)
Orem Owiz (LA Angels)
Rocky Mountain Vibes (Milwaukee Brewers)
Appalachian League (Rookie) (would be reduced to a single team: the Pulaski Yankees)
Bluefield Blue Jays (Toronto Blue Jays)
Bristol Pirates (Pittsburgh Pirates)
Burlington Royals (KC Royals)
Danville Braves (Atlanta Braves)
Elizabethton Twins (Minnesota Twins)
Greeneville Reds (Cincinnati Reds)
Johnson City Cardinals (St. Louis Cardinals)
Kingsport Mets (NY Mets)
Princeton Rays (Tampa Bay Rays)
For those keeping track, the cuts by parent organization are:
Cutting 4 teams:
Reds (AA, A+, R+, R)
Cutting 3 teams
Royals (A, R+, R)
Cutting 2 teams
Angels (A, R+)
Braves (A+, R)
Cardinals (SS, R)
Diamondbacks (AA, R+)
Marlins (A, SS)
Mets (AA, R))
Nationals (A, SS)
Rockies (A+, R+)
Tigers (AA)
Cutting 1 team
Astros (A)
Blue Jays (R)
Brewers (R+)
Dodgers (R+)
Giants (SS)
Indians (SS)
Mariners (A)
Orioles (A+)
Padres (SS)
Phillies (SS)
Pirates (R)
Rays (R)
Red Sox (SS)
Twins (R)
White Sox (R+)
Yankees (SS)
Not cutting any affiliates
Athletics
Cubs
Rangers
This doesn't even make any sense in a "evening affiliation amounts" out sort of way because it's not like the teams cutting more ties have more affiliates.
According to the MiLB website, the Reds have 8 affiliate teams right now from AAA down to AZL and DSL Rookie ball. They would literally be chopping out half of their affiliations. And even if we assume that they would replace the AA Chattanooga Lookouts with another AA club (somewhat of a historical travesty given that the team has operated as an MLB affiliate since 1932 and has been an active baseball team dating all the way back to 1885), they're still down to just 5 levels of ball in their org (AAA, AA, A, Arizona (summer) League Rookie and Dominican Summer League Rookie)
Meanwhile the A's are not said to be dropping anyone and currently have teams at all 7 major levels (AAA, AA, A+, A, Short-Season, Rookie, DSL Rookie.
What also makes it funny is that MLB likely will twist this as "we're not actually killing teams, just severing ties. The clubs are free to continue operating independently!" even though the reality is that no minor league team in a league stocked with affiliate MLB prospects is going to be able to sustain itself competitively, financially, or interest-wise with non-affiliate cast-offs or undrafted prospects. Especially not when MLB is also saying they intend to establish a "Dream League" which will specifically be geared to be a league-run showcase circuit to provide playing time and scouting opportunities for MLB clubs to watch the best in undrafted talent trying to earn a shot at an MLB contract. So congratulations chopping block teams! You lose the biggest reason you exist, a huge factor in fan interest, and the most significant potential alternative to your current existence all in one fell swoop!
I do get the basic thesis of the plan. The minor league system is quite bloated. They would do well to cut a level or two of rookie ball and have maybe 7 tiers (AAA, AA, A+, A, Short-A/A-, Rookie, Summer League Rookie) and have every org have exactly that setup. If you need to consolidate geographically disparate leagues somewhat to make it work, then use the savings from cut affiliates to subsidize travel in the name of providing your prospects with the best possible competition for their development.
But this sort of apparently willy-nilly way that they're just plucking parts of leagues off the map could make entire swaths of the minor league structure collapse in on itself when half your below-A+ leagues find themselves unable to sustain fan interest because they're playing in a league that's only 6 teams big or one where it's 10 teams but 3 or 4 of them are non-affiliate scrub rosters that are probably going under inside of 5 years. And the Minor leagues can't consolidate flagging sister levels on their own because if they could it would've happened already. The NWL is geographically limited the way it is because you can't just have teams from Washington and Vancouver trekking out to northern or central California or Nevada or whatever on buses. It's just not feasible.
The other thing that would seemingly help this out is to move the draft up. Instead of conducting it in the summer, do it in the MLB off-season just like the other sports do. If the draft was in February, you could have your drafted players ready to report to even the full-season minor league levels right at the start of the season and end some of the shenanigans where R+ and SS clubs play like 3 weeks of games before reinforcements of drafted prospects show up. For the guys that would be going to short run June-August leagues, have them stay in the team's training facility and work out with scouts and coaches for April and May, or turn one of the rookie leagues into an early-SS league that runs from late March through May and ends just before summer leagues and short-A leagues begin. I'll absolutely bet it'd be a lot more complicated than I'm making it sound in suggesting this idea, but certainly exploring something like this has to be better than what they appear to be doing right now. I mean, most rookie leagues don't charge for attendance or anything and are operating basically as open inter-squad practices rather than a for-profit gate-driven spectator sport. So it's not like "but that idea wouldn't make any money!" is really a concern at that particular level of baseball development.