by dharmabums » Tue Feb 14, 2012 1:05 pm
I've been wondering about this too Valen, the relationship of autodraft success and league success for the $200M teams. I don't think we're going to get anything more than anecdotal data for looking at this thing. My impression is that the autodraft is still important, but not as important as it was before all the card additions. Even with the card additions, in my experience most of the $200M autodrafts pretty much clean out the >$8M position players, and most of the >$8M SPs and >$4M RP-onlys. As nev said, you sometimes get the odd autodraft where nobody picks Ruth or Gibson. But that is because guys decide to not jump into the Josh-lottery, and go for some of the many other perfectly good catchers. Personally, the last three times I've gotten Mays is as a HAL-replacement for Mantle or Speaker; every time I put him in my autodraft list I never get him (go figure). But those situations tend to be the exception to the rule. At the $200M level, the autodraft strategy is important, at least it seems like it "should" be important. I personally like the stategizing about the autodraft. It's an appealing aspect to the game. The addition of the new cards has meant that I can pick some players lower in my draft card than I used to -- Lincecum is still a decent pitcher, but I've been able to get him in the lower half of my draft card lately, whereas a while back he had to be pretty high up. At the lower caps, creating a team after the autodraft is fun too. A couple of times, when a low cap league was about to fill, I've done the "pick it for me HAL" routine, and built a team from the remnants. I would never try that at the $140M or $200M caps. Just a different aspect to the game. I remember a poll sometime back asking about the different parts of the strat game players liked, and a pretty good number preferred the draft and preseason time.
Anyway, JMHO on the topic.