I'm sure this is gonna be a hot debate, but I'm gonna get to the bottom of this, and I'm ready to take it on.
As you know, I have ventured into Strat-O-Matic's proprietary game engine code and have been trying to figure things out. I've put traces in the bullpen logic functions and have been reviewing them for a little while now. What's jumped out at me is this following theory:
[b:14d6937bfa]Most of the perceived failings of the computer's bullpen management are actually the result of small, overworked, or over-restricted bullpens.[/b:14d6937bfa]
The game engine was originally written to manage teams which are constructed similarly to real-life teams - i.e. with 11-man staffs, and 5- or 6-man bullpens. It does an effective job with them, and produces realistic results over the course of a full season. As I'm following along with the leagues that you're playing now, all I'm seeing everywhere are small (4-man), overworked bullpens, and every other pitcher set to "Avoid" something or other. Thus, in a given relief situation, the computer manager does the best it can with very few choices, and that only makes it harder for each successive decision it has to make, and then you'll see it seemingly "ignore" some of the settings you've assigned. If you have 1 guy set as a closer, 2 guys set to avoid lefties, and another guy set to avoid being used before the 8th, that doesn't leave the computer a lot of options in a crucial 6th inning situation.
It is my opinion, and that of some prominent members of the SOM Online community, that if you carry a large, [i:14d6937bfa]realistic[/i:14d6937bfa] enough bullpen (at least 5 eligible guys, preferably even 6), that you'll see that HAL will do a good job managing it.
This said, [b:14d6937bfa]I am giving you the opportunity to convince me otherwise.[/b:14d6937bfa] I could say, "there's no changing the code," but I WON'T. I am prepared to make necessary changes, IF I am convinced that there is a problem. I think this is a fair approach. I'm starting another thread in which you can post specific examples of what you think are poor relief decisions.
Thanks,
Bernie