by spicki17 » Wed Aug 09, 2006 9:11 am
what bleacher said is probably confusing to a new SOM player, so here's the deal. when you set your rotation, regardless of if you have stars or non-stars, to determine who starts the game, it looks for the highest in your rotation who is not tired.
if you have a star, any time that pitcher pitches he will require 3 days of rest then can throw again. if you have a non-star, any time that pitcher pitches, he will require 4 days of rest, then can throw again.
thus, you have 5 non-stars, they will throw in order every 5th day all season long (if no one is injured). if you have 4 stars, they will throw in order every 4th day. so, if you have 4 stars, it makes no sense to have any more starters than maybe a .5 backup (since that 5th sp will never see action).
it gets complicated when you mix and match * and non-* sp's. if you ever put a non-* ranked above a * in your rotation, then it negates the * for the second pitcher (since the second pitcher must wait each time in the rotation for the first pitcher to pitch).
typically if managers mix and match *'s and non-*'s they will do 1 star and 4 non-stars (thus the 1 star throws every 4th day, and the other 4 pick up the rest of the time), or 2 stars and 3 non-stars (the first 2 stars throw 2 out of 4 games, the non-stars pick up the rest), etc. in these cases the stars are ranked higher than the non-*'s so they get more innings out of the *'s (since they are normally better pitchers).