by MARCPELLETIER » Fri Feb 05, 2010 2:24 am
[quote:34b7a0bd99]If you can prove that Strat systematically prices one type of player below a different type of equivalent value...ie, makes the one-win defender "cheaper" to draft than the one-win hitter....then and only then can you say draft defense over hitting. [/quote:34b7a0bd99]
Well, your logic is sound, and the question is how Strat is able to balance dh-ing with playing the field.
At one extreme, you have the position that lousy fielders are accurately priced as fielders, and henceforth they are incredible bargains as dh. Under this view, if a ss4e21 is worth the same value AS A SS over a replacement player than a ss1e10, then Strat probably priced them the same. Of course, it follows logically that the ss4e21 will be an incredible better value when used AS A DH than the ss1e10 when USED AS A DH.
At the other extreme, you have the position that lousy fielders are accurately priced when being used as dh, but are terribly overvalued when they are being used in the field.
Of course, the truth might be in between these two positions.
According to DEAN's defensive charts analysis (see his post in the strategy section), the five lousiest defenders compared to perfect defenders (1e0; for this ranking, I am excluding 0.5M players, and excluding supplementary defensive positions found on cards) are in order:
1-Renteria
2-Peralta
3-Weeks
4- Bradley
5- Cust
(In fact, Dean did not consider arm strength, so Cust might be a little bit worst than Bradley).
The question to settle the issue becomes this: when looking over this list, do people feel that these players are accurately priced as fielders and are superbargains when being used as DH?
I don't feel so. Renteria is a lopsided card, most people would think of him as a good investment if limited to lhp. Bradley looks like a superbargain (more on him later). But looking over Peralta, Weeks, and Cust, it's hard to conclude that these three players are superbargains as dh.
My own take, for what is worth, is that this list would be good investment for dh, but not superbargains, but would be terrible values when playing the field. So my own position is that Strat is in the middle ground between the extreme positions I described earlier, but Strat leans more towards the second extreme.
Bradley does appear as a super-bargain, though. But contrary to the other cards, he's switch (something I feel Strat undervalues slightly), draws a lot of walk (same argument), and is injury-prone (something I feel Strat undervalues significatively).