by honestiago1 » Thu Nov 23, 2006 10:44 am
I can never seem to put together a decent Oak team. However, I would say your dependence on OBP is directly proportional to the singles rating of the park. OAK REALLY surpresses hitting. You need good OBP there to be consistent. Of course, if you draft hitters who actually played in pitcher's parks (Strawberry, McGwire, Canseco, GDavis), you can get production anywhere.
I'd say as a general rule of thumb not to get too wound up on the effects of home park. Draft a team with good table setters and good sluggers. Have some D up the middle. As far as pitching goes, it helps to have an ace or two, plus some good middle relievers (I think RP gets overlooked WAY too much, esp. since most of the SP's outside Clemens are crap shoots). I'd advise you to draft some pitcher's park hitters and move them into a neutral park, such as Olympic, Yankee or Exhibition.
For a pitcher's park, here are some suggestions for hitters:
Strawberry (played in Shea)
GDavis (played in the Astrodome, so he'll hit ANYWHERE)
Harrah (productive in ANY park; ALL his years are usable [you can bat him leadoff in the years he lacks power]).
Cey (played in Dodger; walks and hits HR's; glove is average)
Oberkfell (walks, plus a great glove [and can swing to 2B]).
Paciorek (average defense in LF, but 3 years over .300; hits a lot of doubles).
DwMurph (played in OAK; Walks+Power+Gold Glove CF).
Hendrick (cannon arm ni RF; good average/slg.; played in Busch).
RJones (played in hitter's parks, but draws walks, slugs, runs well and has a good glove)
DMartinez (good utility guy; speed, average, some power, good arm, but NO WALKS).
Redus (walks plus blazing speed)
LSmith (HORRIBLE glove, but can post MVP numbers)
Pendleton (a 1 at 3B, plus TWO years of excellent power, and a very good RBI year).
Good relief choices on the cheap):
JRobinson (most years useful)
ALopez ((see comment above)
Clear (worth a gamble, as he can be shut down and eat innings)
Tekulve (if you want to REALLy keep the ball down, go here)
Sisk (no HR's, but some awful WHIPs)
Gott (mid-priced, and some shutdown years)
Look for the 1-2M RP, where possible, and try to get a couple of them. If you can't get all great SP, think about drafting 6 SP (1-3 of whom are "locks" to be decent), and rotate your other starters into the rotation based on opponents (3 pitchers who can swing to the bullpen allows you to start your "skewed" pitchers against those teams with weaknesses versus LH or RH; for example, you might have McWilliams in the 7L year and Beattie in the 5R year [I think it's 5R]; you can pick and choose who to start them against, based on your opponent's splits. Further, you can pick and choosde fly ball vs. groundball pitchers, depending on where you're playing that series -- flexibility is nice! [though it requires more work).
FINALLY: I'd advise you NOT to designate a stopper, at least not early. Let HAL use your best relievers in the optimal situations. There are WAY too many "save" situations that 99% of pitchers can make it through (ex: a 2 or 3-run lead in the 9th can be protected by almost any decent pitcher; but for that 1-run lead in the 7th, you need the big guns).