by Treyomo » Wed Oct 19, 2011 12:20 pm
I sympathize with all those who have struggled with lack of trades or bad trade offers. I have seen bad offers and made bad offers. The following statements are a generalization, an opinion on my part, that does apply to everyone but I believe applies to most of us:
We all want to win.
So, in making or receiving trade offers, we typically want to "win" the exchange. We don't make it lopsided. We just load it so it is slightly in our favor, or counter existing offers that are slightly in the other manager's favor with one that is slightly in favor of ourselves. Even if we are trading to fill a position of need where our opponent has depth, we still want to tack a couple other players on to "win" the exchange.
There are plenty of exceptions - trades to free cap spaces, trades for favorite players, trades for guys who fit a park better. But even in something like a trade for cap space, you will try to give away the most expensive underperformer that you would have cut anyway to free up that space.
Many of us know which players perform best, so to acquire those players in trades, we have to offer up players with similar salaries who perform slightly worse. It's the nature of trading.
IMO, a lot of trading frustration would be alleviated if the "horribly lopsided" trade offers were stopped. That rating is in the eye of the beholder, but we know what they are in general:
- in 200M leagues, offering two marginal 7M players for a 11M stud and some mediocre back end bullpen guy.
- for the experience vets, offering an obvious underperformer to get an obvious overperformer for the same salary - hitting rookies up with sucker trades is a great way to drive away potential new players, and pisses off the vets who know better
- offering up a so-so player who we proclaim is a "great fit for your park" in exchange for a player who's great anywhere
We're all guilty of some of these at some point, and we've all seen plenty of these. If we stopped doing these type of offers ourselves, I think that trades would flow more freely, because every offer that pops up isn't immediately judged with skepticism.
My manifesto is complete. Back to staring at spreadsheets all day.