by yak1407 » Sun Jan 22, 2006 8:57 am
There is no rhyme nor reason why anyone drops anybody that quickly.
My current league, someone dropped Dawson six games in and all he's done is hit around .300 drive in 90 and slam 20 plus HRs in 123 games for my team, and he went his 21 games with me without a dinger.
What puzzles me is when someone drops an expensive player after a couple of ABs where he's gone 1 for 2 or 2 for 4. Those guys are definitely worth a look see.
Pitching is so tough to determine. The rule of thumb is five starts before you make a decision, but it's so tough when a guy who were counting on gets lit up his first two or three starts. Relief pitching is worse because a guy can have one bad outing and it ruins his stats for weeks. I look at how RPs have done. If you have a guy who is effective three games out of four, he's probably a keep despite his stats.
Also, when HAL manages the pen there is a pecking order. You can see who your top guy is and who isn't
More and more I find the best plan is to stay the course, give players a chance to perform and wait until you have a good reason to release them.
And watch the splits. I have Bobby Grich's worst year. But he's batting over .300 and has an OBP over .400 vs RHPs. I platoon him, but if Alan Trammell wasn't also tanking for me I'd use him everyday to keep his glove in the line-up
The wisest piece of advice I've found on this board is solve one problem at a time. Don't recall who said, but they are truly wise.
And don't lose faith.
I thought I had turned the corner when I had back to back teams make the play-offs.
Then I put together what I thought was my best team and won 63 games.