by voovits » Wed Jan 04, 2012 3:22 pm
If nothing, HAL is consistent in his decision making. His choices of [i:569f3d8776]who[/i:569f3d8776] to start are not necessarily the best (especially at C) as he favors defense way too much. Having said that, all the valuable information comes from the batting order, which will lead me to answer Franky's question.
When analyzing lineups, I have learned to completely disregard the #1 and 2 slots. I'm sure there's some reasoning HAL uses to fill those slots, but I have noticed it's not always high OBP/Speed guys. It almost seems to me that HAL fills those slots in with whatever is left after filling 3-9, which brings me to the rest of the order.
Before I start a season, I take 2 guys who I want to start who I consider to be the 2 safest players on my team (80s/90s Butler, 70s Carew, 80s Murphy, etc:) and manually place them in the 1 and 2 slots. I will then let HAL fill in the rest knowing that offensively, 3 is better than 4, who is better than 5, who is better than 6, and so on.
After the first night , if necessary, I will switch up the guys I had in the 1 and 2 slots to see where they are placed.
So to answer the question, in all likelihood Kingman is on a lousy card. If he was playing on 79, he likely would have hit 3rd, but considering I have no reasoning for the choices in the 1 and 2 slots, I would not guarantee it until I saw where he his outside of those 2 slots.