by rburgh » Tue Oct 04, 2011 7:31 pm
Petro,
See my post from 10/2 at 16:00. I didn't remember the name of the game, though.
Anybody that thinks Ed Walsh could pitch 250 innings (let alone 422) and allow only 3 HR in today's MLB needs to come down off of their cloud and rejoin the real world. Similarly, anyone who thinks that Roy Halladay would have allowed 24 HR in 250.2 innings if pitching before 1920 doesn't understand the difference in equipment, ballparks, strategy, and physical skills between today and 100 years ago.
SOM has apparently (rightly, in my opinion) decided to build this card set so that it mimics modern day baseball. If hitters are going to hit more or less their real-life numbers of HR in this game, somebody is going to have to give them up.
Using the SOM model, a typical league average pitcher over the past 30 years or so will give up about a dozen HR per 1000 BFP. That translates to about 8 per 700 PA, which is a normal amount of PA in a full season for an everyday batter. ALL of the rest of those HR are coming off the batter cards.
If they would modify the game so that some pitchers could suppress HR off the batter's card, then (a) salaries of those pitchers would soar, and (b) a (probably different) group of people are going to be whining about their hitters drastically underperforming. There's no way to satisfy both camps.
SOM's decision is that HR's sell better than gbA's. I suspect they're right. And I also suspect that a pitcher-dominated game would generate more, and louder, complaints from the players here. In fact, I suspect the volume of the complaints would only be limited by the number of defections of disgruntled managers.
A quick analysis of the top 50 pitchers (by salary, with results per season) vs. the next 50 yields the following interesting numbers. After every stat, the first number is the average performance of the top 50 and the 2nd is the next 50.
ERA 4.59 4.86
WHIP 1.366 1.422
W/L % .505 .493
HR/9 1.588 1.559
Uses 7243 2873
The number that jumps out, of course, is the HR rate. But that's almost surely due to the fact that most of the top 50 cards, and few of the next 50, are staples of the live draft leagues.
Pitchers do, in fact, produce more or less in relation to the value of their cards, it's just that the great pitchers are producing numbers that we associate with innings-eater starters in real baseball. Rest assured, the next tier of starters would be doing worse in your league. Your fellow managers agree, by almost a 3:1 margin.