by MARCPELLETIER » Mon Dec 21, 2009 11:18 pm
[quote:864c057a5a]...but still wondering why you weren't following the advice in your own strategy thread (unless you were following the advice, just utilizing lower dollar RPs maybe?)[/quote:864c057a5a]
For the newcomers, I'll summarize the advice I gave in the Strategy section a few months ago.
A few months ago, I was using this TSN team, which finished with 98 wins
http://fantasygames.sportingnews.com/stratomatic/team/team_other.html?user_id=212143
When the season started, I had only ONE big reliever, Nathan; I did not have Hoffman, and I was noticing I was losing a big share of tight games, so much that I had fallen early 3 games below my expected record. I argued that adding a reliable closer such as Hoffman would stop that trend and help my team perform like the expected record, and the sims I did seem to show evidence of this (it should be noted that my TSN team nevertheless finish 5 games under its expected record).
I still believe in this argument, but you have to understand the context. This team was a Fenway team, so with a lot of singles allowed, thus a greater expected whip (despite the fact that I specifically selected low whip starters), and thus a greater risk for my SPs for an early 3-hits/walks leave from my starter. Besides, this team had two SP(5), and three SP(6), and no SP(7). Finally, overall, the pitching sqaud can qualified as good, but not exceptional.
In THIS context, having ONE big closer/set-up becomes problematic, because chances are that HE will come in early in the 6th/7th inning in a great share of games, leaving nobody-but-cheapies to close the deal. In THIS context, adding a second closer becomes an obvious way to help your team.
In Luckyman's team, context is different. Here is a TSN team that is a carbon-copy (at least when it comes to pitching) to the Luckyman's team, one that won 100 games (different from the simmed team: this TSN team had Nolasco instead of Santana, and played in Petco instead of PNC):
http://fantasygames.sportingnews.com/stratomatic/team/team_other.html?user_id=227372
In this team, my SP squad is superior to the Fenway's squad. Overall, they pitched 80 more innings, and that number would have been greater if it wasn't of my specification to limit Maholm to 7 innings.
Soria pitched 89 games, of which 66 games were finished by him, leaving out 23 games that Soria could not finish. I don't have Nathan's number, unfortunately, but I would think this number is at least twice as big.
Note that both Soria and Nathan pitched 150 innings, which is pretty much the upper limit of R1/C6 set at set-up/closer. But those 150 innings are not exactly the same. Presumably, up to 80 of those 150 innings came earlier in games that involved Nathan, 80 innings being the number left out by the Fenway SP squad. Part of those 80 innings, no doubt, are game-deciding innings, so there a need for fulfilling these innings by a good reliever. Conversely, only 23 games were not finished by Soria, so the need for having another closer is not as acute in the Petco/PNC team than it is for the Fenway team.
I should still note this: the 100-win team was still quite lucky. It played 4 games above its expected record, and no doubt part of this comes from an outstanding (as in OUT-standing) performance of my sub-1M pitchers. Feldman went 4-0, basically grabbing those 4 wins in overtime. Overall, the cheapies went 11-5, saving 18 games out of 23 opportunities. In another not-so-lucky season, my cheapies might have ended up with a 7-9 record, with perhaps up to 10 blown saves. Still, at 96-66, I would still be around, and not under, the expected record. This underlines again the lack of need to add a second strong closer to the mix.
In the sims, the Luckyman team, on average, outplayed its expected record by 1 win. I used Rodney as a potential closer (in the case Rivera couldn't finish the job). And I used Robertson as the other go-to-guy, as I thought that his card was a perfect match to PNC's settings.
Last edited by
MARCPELLETIER on Tue Dec 29, 2009 3:34 pm, edited 2 times in total.