by gbrookes » Thu Oct 07, 2010 7:59 pm
Here's a different idea for an enhancement to the strat-o-matic game (I know this is beyond TSN's involvement - this would be strat itself changing its game):
How about something like N or W power ratings and card results, but on the BATTER's card!
If it is a good idea for the pitcher's card (with respect to batter's power), it has to be at least 1/2 way as good an idea to have the same concept on the batter's card, but this time with respect to a pitcher's home run control!!!
Consider this - what are the odds, realistically speaking, the you can duplicate Ubaldo Jimenez's 2009 performance, playing out a Colorado season? Some may argue, and I'm sure some may claim that a sample of 50 games results in a mean or median number of homeruns allowed that is the same as his 2009 statistics. But really, playing 1/2 his games in Coors, facing hitters usually with N power and ballpark homerun readings on the batter's card time after time after time, how often will U. Jimenez duplicate his 2009 home run control?
So, why not have readings on homeruns and ballpark homeruns on the batter cards as follows:
-some readings the same as before - no N or W rating;
-some with readings that are * N homerun (N for normal), but if the pitcher has a C rating (for control), the result is a single instead.
The way I see it, most pitchers would have an N rating. Only a few pitchers that have excellent homerun control (basically those who would tend to have difficulty duplicating their real life homerun control performance without this system) would get the C rating. Even then, a significant portion of the batter homerun results would be homeruns regardless of the pitcher homerun control rating.
I think this would really enhance online strat gaming, and the realism of the game. In my experience (with my teams or watching my fellow gamer's teams), the super-pitcher suffers all too often because the opposing batters keep rolling homeruns on their own card, for which the super-pitcher has no answer or influence on the result (in my opinion, unrealistically).
What do you think?
By the way, I intend to suggest this enhancement to strat-o-matic directly.
Geoff Brookes