by MARCPELLETIER » Sun Nov 08, 2009 1:37 am
@krgrecw
When building your team, you might conclude that you won't need more than, say 80-100 innings, from your closer. This would be the case if you build a pitching staff with extremely solid SPs, especially in a pitcher's park, or if you plan to rely on an extremely solid set-up man who could close a few games (someone like Balfour, for example, can be used as your main set-up man and closer, with your "closer" set as the 2nd closer in your bullpen set-up, such that he will come in when your set-up man is used earlier). In this scenario, spending for a mid-price closer makes perfectly sense.
You can limit a closer to the ninth inning if you set him up as a closer, without giving him any other role. You can further restrict his usage by clicking the option "don't come before the 8th". By doing so, Hal will limit your closer only to closing situations, except when no other reliever will be available to throw the 8th inning.
This said, I see little reason in Strat for limiting your closer, if he's a good one, to the 9th inning. If you introduce your closer in the 8th, there is of course a risk that he allows three hits/walks in the 8th, which will make him unavailable for the 9th. But this is a small risk for the greater advantage to have a very good pitcher when the game is on the line.
Personally, I would limit the usage of a closer to the 9th, in the fashion explained in the preceding paragraph, only for a cheap closer, in a context of a cheap bullpen, where everyone has a specific assigned role.