O.K. after a slight H&R break, I have my second H&R team gettng ready to go.
I am using this next team to try a few slight changes in the approach I had to the H&R with my last team and equally as important I am hoping this next team will shed some light to statistical numbers regarding the usage of the strategy by HAL.
1st. The Park.
As it was discussed above I am going with SBC. Though it does limit the BP OBP to RHB it should provide the pitching with a slight chance of being better able to hold on to small leads, at least by supressing HRs and if the staff is predominantly RH it should limit Opp. OBP slighlty.
2nd. The Adjustments to H&R.
In my last team I ran the H&R in two ways. The first, which proved to be fairly inneficient, was to have hitters with a B H&R rating and good running lined up one after the other, the idea was to maximize the chances of different hitters triggering the next batter to an A rating and executing the play in different spots in the lineup. The problem with this is that I had no control over where would the play be executed. Sometimes hitters that are are better of swinging away were "sacrificed" and sometimes in the context of the lineup an unnecessary attempt happened given who was on deck and in the hole.
The second way isolated the H&R much more effectively to certain points in the LU and it seemed to have had some fairly positive results: the hits off H&R went up, the SB Pct. stayed ok and the successful moves was ok too. The problem is that the play was ran in such low numbers that it made difficult to evaluate whether or not the usage of the H&R pays dividends vs. high K pitchers, and as an offensive strategy in general in SOM-OL.
This last way is what I mentioned before: a lineup that is divided in three segments. Triggers, Hitters and Cleaners. Where the "triggers" get on base with good speed, trigger the "hitters" B rating to an A and then the "Cleaners" can score the guy from 2nd with a SI or from 3rd with a FO.
Now in deciding which way to go for this next team and going through the player pool, a problem came up with this approach. The good OBP hitters (Trigger candidates) are also usually good hitters, either way they're better off swinging away. The Cleaners usually are poor runners so they have a hard time also serving as triggers and some of the B H&Rers are too good to have them in that position and not good enough to have either Triggering or Cleaning. So, I adjusted the approach where the trigger and the cleaner are the same and the H&Rer has to be A) Pretty good defensively B) Pretty cheap and C) Have a card that doesn't pose any loss when using the H&R.
Given SBC the trigger/cleaner has to have: Ideally a RHB, a 400+ OBP, a * running, and a 300+ AVG.
The H&Rer must excell defensively, be cheap, have a B H&R rating, sub .250 AVG and sub .300 OBP should lower their pricetag and offer the possibility of a gain in their production by using the H&R.
3. The Team
The team is to take part in a non-DH league, which I believe is a better enviroment for the strategy. It will feature 3 Hit and Runners, 4 Trigger/Cleaners and Andrew Jones.
Andrew Jones doesn't really fit the team except for the very important reasons that his defense is quite good and for the reasons Lucky already pointed out defense should be good in this experiment. He is a RHB who should benfit slightly from SBC, his SLG provides an extra chance to have production and most importantly, in a BP that encourages baserunners his -4 arm will hopefully limit wild base running. Having said this the CF pool though rich is not particularily condusive to this exercise, other than Endy Chavez as a H&Rer the options are fairly limited and they all have negative sides, either poor running, poor defense, too expensive...and as luck would have it Endy Chavez was taken (again).
So the H&Rers are Neifi Perez (2B), John Olerud (1B) and Cesar Izturis (SS). Izturis is way too expensive a H&Rer but his main contribution is defensively. I am hoping that in the '06 set Jack Wilson will provide a much better alternative. Originally I wanted Matheny as the H&R Catcher, but given the limited pool of triggers/cleaners I opted for:
Kendall (C), Mora (3B), Berkman (LF) and Ichiro (RF).
One of the advantages of the lower salaries to the H&Rers and the absence of a DH is that it left more cash to be put into pitching, though I lack the dominating arms in my starting rotation I have a fairly solid bullpen anchored by Gordon and Calero and 4 5ths of my rotation are non *SP over 3 mil with my 5th starter being Greinke who should fair OK in SBC. As an added bonus this being a non DH league, most of the parks supress HRs and only 5 supress OBP significantly (3 Petcos, 1 Safeco and 1 Wrigley). I still wish I coul've netted a dominating *SP but well...maybe next time.
4. The plan.
What I am intending to do is through the makeup of the lineups, manager settings and individual players' settings restrict the bunting and stolen bases game. Only pitchers should bunt and the only SB/CS should be a byproduct of failed H&R plays, while at the same time only in three spots in the lineup should the H&R be attempted. After each series I should have a much easier chance of figuring out who and when tried to H&R vs. what pitcher/catcher combo and the outcome.
I am hoping that at the end of the season I'll have a better idea of how HAL uses the H&R, pitcher's sacs and the overall effectiveness of the strategy.
Will post some stats as they come around.