by gbrookes » Sun Feb 28, 2010 9:33 pm
I have been playing strat-o-matic as a manual board game for about 40 years. I have been playing computer strat and online strat for just the last 20 months. It took me a while to get the hang of some things in online strat, and I have learned hugely from the experiences in the last 20 months. The more I learn about this game, the more I think the game is absolutely brilliant AND a good simulation of real life baseball strategy.
I also believe that a great infield can help your pitchers HUGELY. A 2 range fielder at SS is almost obligatory. I seem to get away with a 3 range at 2b in $60 mil cap leagues, but logically 2b should be a 2 range as well. Avoid really high e ratings for 2b and ss. IMO, 3b and 1b are far less important - avoid very high e-ratings and you are OK. Don't forget about the pitcher's defense - just as NB as 1b! At catcher, I have learned that a high e rating will cause a fair number of errors. I hate throwing errors by catchers, so I avoid catchers with high throwing errors. In the OF, ranges of 3 or lower are required, since there is a BIG increase in base hits at the level of a 4 range (or 5). What I like hugely in outfielders is a good arm - the increased baserunning rules (almost any single other than** or X chart) make a good arm absolutely necessary, IMO.
Matching your pitchers to your ballpark is hugely important, and something that I am still learning and experimenting with. As an example, I got huge results from Scott Kazmir in 2008 pitching at PNC. His main weakness - HR's to RH hitters - is really reduced by the dead zone for long balls to leftfield at PNC. By matching up in this way, you can get a LOT more performance from your pitchers.
With respect to pitchers themselves, I DO put a lot of value on them - this may be my personal style - but I do. For me, this means spending between $20 million and $33 million on pitchers (ranging due to cap size, ballpark considerations, and overall team strategy - e.g. one team was in Camden, and I spent more on my hitters for that team - at PNC I spent more on my pitchers I think, but I got Adrian Gonzalez and Aubrey Huff to be my lefty sluggers). I believe there is an art to getting the right pitcher for a particular team - sort of like finding the last puzzle pieces in a puzzle, that "fit" the team.
I wouldn't be so bold (and therefore not humble) in writing all of this, except that I really enjoy the online banter at strat and would like to share my thoughts with others as well, and that I think I have learned some good tricks - my 10 2008 teams made the playoffs 8 times, and won twice - I am very proud of that. And these thoughts come from those 10 teams. The ones that didn't work are probably the ones you learn most from! I think I will spend my whole life working out these perplexing but rewarding strategy questions!
ENJOY!
:)
Geoff Brookes