This has been bugging me since I slowly began to understand the the basics of this game and its time for me to chime in with my two cents. I might be off base but my experience in leagues tell me otherwise. So here goes with my opinion of what I consider one of the most common pieces of advice seen on these boards:
"<Team> is too <rh, lh slanted> and your opponents will toss <rh's, lh's> at you all day long." Well, maybe its just the leagues I'm in but I rarely see more than a 4 or 5 man rotation on the majority of the teams and for the most part it is nearly impossible (during the regular season) for a team to alter one's pitching staff just to face your heavily slanted lineup that is suited for your ballpark. There are some teams (perhaps in your division) that might carry that one extra pitcher for the sole purpose of facing your team, but that luxury normally consists of a sub $1 million dollar pitcher anyways.
I don't understand why folks continue to toss this misconception out there. Case in point...
In my first 10 2005 leagues, I had made the playoffs 9 times, losing out the 10th time to a tie-breaker, yet I only had one title to show for it, so when I put team 11 together I decided to "protect" myself on the idea of maybe these folks tossing out this information (misinformation?) knew something I had yet to figure out. What has it gotten me? A team hovering just above and below the .500 mark and what will surely be my first non playoff team.
Seeing how the two biggest one way stadiums are Shea and Wrigley, I challenge anyone who continues to advise folks with this idea that folks "will be tossing one way pitchers day in and day out at you" to show me a link where more than 2 or 3 teams in a league actually are carrying these excess pitchers "designed to stop YOU". I haven't seen it yet, maybe I've just been lucky.
I have an open mind so I can be swayed. Frankly, I'm just not seeing it. Prove me wrong and I'll be happy to agree. Until I see proof, I'm just not buying into the theory.