by J-Pav » Sun Feb 11, 2007 8:16 pm
I have in fact thought of breaking it down by position as well. I don't know that it would lead to any improved insights though, because it would basically give you the same result. What would likely be more telling is the amounts over and underspent, on average.
For instance, your top salary is $4 plus mil over the top salary average. Your next salary is $5 plus mil over. So the question becomes, are Lee and A-Rod and a one dollar pitcher worth Guerrero, Manny Ramirez and Pedro? This is what "salary construction" (as I'm trying to describe it) is all about.
I read somewhere in one of those baseball numbers books that the ideal lineup would consist of nine equally very good hitters, as opposed to three stars, three good and three poor. Whether everyone agrees this is true or not is open to debate. But bringing this idea into the strat world, let's say we try to build a nine man lineup of all $5 mil guys. I've found that when you do this, because there are only so many $5 mil guys, you start reaching some and conceding some, choosing among bargains, platoons, five tool stars, etc. When it's all said and done, you often end up with what looks a lot like this: $9, 8, 6, 5, 4.5, 4, 3, 2.5, 1.5. Is this the strat version of "an ideal lineup?"