I am frustrated with SOM on-line at this point. My frustration is not that I am losing some leagues, I can handle losing. But that it seems like that there is so much randomness and luck, I can't tell when I am truly making good or bad decisions, and when it is my luck. I have been in the playoffs once, and it was by my judgment, and by the common wisdom on this board, as far as I read it, my worst team (it was my first), I had high injury players, a pitching and releif staff not suited to my division, and I made enough moves that my salary cap was pretty far under 80 by the end, yet, I won my division with a pretty decent record. I have other teams which seemed much more intelligently put together that missed the playoffs.
The other fact that contributes to my "luck is king" line of thought, is that when I look at examples of teams that people post here as successes or models at a certain ballpark, I don't find them any better put together than the also-rans, it's seeming pretty random to me.
So one reason for this post is to ask the question of more expereinced managers, How dominant is luck vs. skill in this environment?
The other reason is I have an idea on how to do a rough but revealing test of the luck vs. skill question. If someone posted teams from say 5 auto leagues that have already run, with rosters but not records, and then aome of the better, more expereinced managers that post on this board looked at those teams and tried to guess which teams won their divisions. then we would have a reading of how much skill vs, luck dominates results. If good managers picked 100% of the winners, that would indicate it's almost all skill. and if they picked right about 25% of the time, it would seem the leagues are pure chance. Depending on how you figure, proportionally or straight line, either 50% or 62.5% is the midline. So if mangers were able to pick the winners between 50 and 62.5 % then I would guess luck and skill are about equal factors in outcome. If it was more than skill is a bigger factor, if less than luck is better. There are all kind of imperfections in this, but I think it would tell us something. Does anyone know how to do this study techinically? It would be interesting.