by bernieh » Tue Sep 13, 2011 4:39 pm
(Edit: I've reconsidered this and will no longer be following this plan)
[color=#999999:7ce1e92982]Ok, this is how we're going to be handling the special case where a player (e.g. Babe Ruth) has one or more hitter cards (1921, 1927) and one or more pitcher cards (1916, to be added on Thursday) in the same player set.
[b:7ce1e92982]The player's hitter card(s) and pitcher card(s) will be available as 2 separate players, meaning Babe Ruth (or Double Duty Radcliffe, etc.) may exist in a league as a hitter (1927), and separately as a pitcher (1916), even on the same team.[/b:7ce1e92982]
So if you want to use The Babe's 1927 hitter card and 1916 pitcher card on your team at the same time, you can, but you'll have to pay for him twice (though Ruth the Pitcher would bat for himself as a generic 8NL-hitting pitcher in a non-DH league). If his two incarnations are on separate teams, then they can face each other.
This situation is necessary because ATG 6 normally gives you exclusive access to a player's other years when you own him - one at a time, of course, and if you are willing to pay the free agent drop penalty each time you switch years. This is especially a problem in a high- or unlimited-cap league, where the drop penalty is trivialized or a non-factor, so that if you own Babe Ruth, you could switch to his hitter card on days his pitcher card wasn't pitching. Even though for regular-cap leagues the drop penalty does discourage this exploit, there would be cases where it could still be an unnatural advantage, and we need to address that.
What doesn't change is that if you draft Babe Ruth's 1921 hitter card, you still have exclusive access to switch to his 1927 hitter card if it makes sense to you. You just won't have access to switch him to his 1916 pitcher card. Conversely, if you draft his 1916 pitcher card, that's the only card you have access to.[/color:7ce1e92982]
Last edited by
bernieh on Thu Sep 15, 2011 9:01 am, edited 1 time in total.