by MARKWEAVER » Thu Aug 24, 2006 1:01 pm
The randomness does get factored into what you expect to see, but of course what you are actually going to observe in a finite number of rolls can't be known in advance. That being said, there is only a 1.4% chance (3/6^3) of having a CATCH-X on any "normal" at bat (not sure how H&R or squeeze plays factor in), so over a season with, say, 6000 batters, give or take, you'd only expect to observe a CATCH-X about 83 times (about 1 every 2 games). Personally, I'm not going to lose sleep over having a 4 behind the plate.
I am using Ron Hassey on my 3rd straight team and am happy enough with the offense he provides to put up with his c-4(+1)e3,T-4(pb-2) defense. In fact, I actually like having a somewhat weaker arm behind the plate because it tends to delete baserunners against those teams who use an aggressive steal setting. In my current league, Hassey is second in the league (behind Simmons, of course) with 87 steals against over 84 games... that sucks, right? But, then consider that the SB % against him is only 0.707... this means that he's erased 36 baserunners. Contrast that with Tony Pena, who has allowed 26 SB with 0.553, which means that he's only erased 21 baserunners. So, sure, Hassey has given up 60 (60! damn!) more bases than Pena, but that doesn't worry me too much since a fair number of those were 3b steals (why does Hal insist on trying to steal 3b so often? there should be separate aggressiveness settings for 2b and 3b, IMO), which don't really help all that much. In fact, in my most recent series, which was against a team that runs A LOT, they stole 9 bases, but Hassey threw out 7 runners... only 2 of the SBs went on to score (one would've scored anyway). I'll take those results any day!
Bottom line, the SB can be an effective weapon in the right situation (which I don't necessarily trust Hal to recognize), but in general it's just not that important to me. So, whenever you're playing me, feel free to steal as much as you like.