by Outta Leftfield » Sun Jan 08, 2006 7:39 pm
For what it's worth, I find myself making fewer and fewer cuts as I've gained experience. If I cut somebody, I really want to have a good reason--e.g. not just bad performance, but reason to believe the player is in a bad year. I drafted this player for a good reason, so I only want to cut him for a good reason. In some recent years I've only made 3 or 4 cuts by the 42 game deadline. I'll often consider a cut 10 times before finally making it (or more often, not making it.) Maybe I'm nuts, but it seems to be working.
Aside from injuries, HBP, triples and other rare events, the other great source of insight on this point is platoon data. Often the platoon data will allow you to make an educated guess about the possible year or (more likely) years a player is in. Sometimes that will lead to a decision to keep the player, sometimes to cut, and sometimes to platoon (as in, this player will be good if I platoon him). In my first season, platoon data kept me from cutting Darryl Strawberry when he was struggling early (and so was my team), and he went on to hit 47 HR, score 111 runs, knock in 120 RBI, and overall, save my season.
Sometimes you just have to make a move even if you're only half sure, but underperformance is only one factor in the equation.