by PotKettleBlack » Wed Aug 25, 2010 2:51 pm
[quote:7ca4d772b1="theMICK64"]I don't need $$$ for pitching. I waste it on Super RP. LOL. I have tried SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO many combo's on pitching and without going into all variations, here are just two. On a recent Forbes team, Maddux goes 16-23 w/3.78 ERA, Alexander/Waddell/Chesbro all win 21 or more and all lesser ERAs. In a sluggers league Dave Wickersham leads league with 23-10 mark. Go figure??????[/quote:7ca4d772b1]
Here's the thing. Wickersham can post an ERA in the 7 range and still win, because he fills what's a natural $3.5-4 M slot at $1.5, so, you can put the extra money in run support. Oh, and he keeps the ball down and gets righties out more often than not. Not every $2M guy works like that. In terms of actual performance, Wickersham teams are .500 with the Wicker Man getting burned to 280-342 and a 7.01 ERA in 5035 IP. Again, you can win with him, but for every 23-10, there is a real stinker.
Randomness happens, and ~25% of a pitcher's card is determined by the fielders behind him.
[quote:7ca4d772b1] I like the idea of tossing Bush down @ 6th in the order, and will try that. Off subject for a moment, but you had 2 of my favorite DH league hitters. Don't you just love the ###s Clark can put up!! Even with the injury risk, he always produces. And dear ole Hack Wilson. Take a moment and pull up his card and compair it to Mays '62 card. Hack is the older/slower Mays, extra walks, afew more doubles, and ALL those natural HRs. Try out this line-up; Higgins/McGraw/Mays/Clark/T.Williams/Wilson- now tell me who drove in the most runs?? [/quote:7ca4d772b1]
Liked Clark a lot, and, as Offense/Defense guys go, not a complete loser in RF.
If I had to figure who gets the RBI's, I'd say Williams/Wilson clean up big. Clark is one of those 80's sluggers who walks a lot, doesn't hit enough to drive in a lot of runs. But he "lengthens the lineup" considerably. And his K's are nice... doesn't advance people, but doesn't ground into double plays that have Williams/Wilson coming up to lead off the inning.
[quote:7ca4d772b1] Now back on subject, after the examples of how you can count on the hitters coming thru, and how inconsitant the pitchers are, what is the best way to spend $$ on pitching?? No matter what stadium, you can not count on Pete/Maddux dominating,or even winning more than they lose. One strategy I've tried that works, get Pete and 3 other 3MIL or less SP, a solid BP of even RP. Playing in Polo'41 which many call a pitchers Bomber park, for the lack of BPS. Now load up on a bunch of High OBA/HR hitting type's (Eddie Murray, Dave Parker, Eddie Matthews, ect, ect.) Start Pete in the two or three hole and he will win. The three times I've done this he was 23-8/25-7 and 28-7. All teams made play-offs. [/quote:7ca4d772b1]
Would be curious to know what the guy who pitched in game 1 finished. If you have Pete #2 and Wickersham #1, I'm guessing Wickersham comes up against other teams' best starter and is overmatched, while Pete overmatches everyone's #2 starter, hence 23-8/25-7/28-7. Of course, you are loading on bats, so #1 starter probably goes 12-14, while #4 starter puts up 16-10, and #3 goes 14-14. Low decision totals for 1, 3, and 4 since I'd load the BP and try and keep those guys from ever throwing more than 6 IP. Pinch hit is the way to go, especially when quality in the BP is so much cheaper than quality starters.
[quote:7ca4d772b1] I'm now going with 3Finger Brown as a spot starter and Super RP. With Mays, Cepeda, Bush, ect. Gr8 defense up the middle. No automatic outs in the line-up, and being DH, Brown will not be pulled for a PH when HAL wants. Looking forward to the start of this season very much. No, I don't care for putting a lot of money into pitching. You CAN'T depend on it as you can the hitting side. Focus on matching your hitters to your home park, then try to get one or two tough pitchers to match up well vs division opp. Hitting 1st, focus on pitching AFTER draft so as to match up vs division foes. Food for thought... :wink:[/quote:7ca4d772b1]
I am trying this in a 100M team I put together for Fenway 71. Will have to wait for it to draft, but put the bats at the drop of the draft list, the BP next, the starters, and then the bench guys. One weak bat (Santiago) and a non-DH league. Will see how it goes.
Some further thought on Brown as Spot Starter/Super RP.
If you work out how starts go over the course of a season, having 3FB do anything other than start game 1 or 2 and make 41 starts is probably suboptimal. Reasons:
1- Innings. He won't pitch 4IP 3 days of 4, so you will get fewer innings using him this way, which diminishes his value. One of the reasons I like Ed Walsh over all other top pitchers is the innings.
2- Optimization. Okay, you counter my claim of innings with a claim that as a reliever, he will pitch higher leverage innings, thereby increasing his value. But i will counter that claim by pointing out that there are cheaper guys to get better performance as RP, so the leverage argument works better for them. In Fenway 71 (working on a team for that, so happen to have the card data handy for that), 3FB's card has a wOBA of .121. As does Bruce Sutter (5.07)for <50% the cost. Sutter (R3-5.69) goes .107, and Eck (R2-4.47) goes .099. So, you can get better guys for the higher leverage stuff. Or, if you like the Spot Start / Super RP concept, why not Babe Adams (S8/R5 - 9.11, wOBA .111) who is cheaper by over 1M and better by a touch, and, if you're really gonna spot start, the * is mostly wasted.
Proper use is to have him start Game 1 or 2, every 4th game, and RP within the relief rules. That's an optimization strategy. I'd do something similar with Babe Adams as well.
Enjoying the meal of thought food. Things to try.