I keep reading in posts about letting HAL set line-ups or leaving slots blank early in the season to see what HAL does.
What I'd really like to know is if anyone has any proof or thoughts that this tells you anything.
Frankly, I no longer do it because I have never had a case where HAL's line-up told me anything.
The last time I tried it, it used Tartabull, a 4, in RF and DHed George Hendrick. It sat Magee and used Jerry Browne in CF. In other words, it totally disregards defensive ratings.
Previously, I had a team where it sat Ogilvie for six straight games. I let him go and then watched while he had a monster year for the guy who picked him up.
I'm almost of the opinion that HAL sets your line-up randomly if you leave slots blank.
And that does make a certain amount of sense.
After all, what is the point of playing the game if HAL does a better job of setting your line-up? And would Strat design a game engine which had HAL doing a better job of setting line-ups? And would we want to play this game? Those of us who keep playing the '80s stopped playing other strat games because there was no challenge picking a team and then just letting it play. I tried three of the others games and finished in first each time and won a championsip. In '80s, I'm on my 11th team with three playoff appearance, one title and a sunb-500 winning percentage, but I keep coming back.
Would I want to keep playing if I learned the mystery behind HAL's line-ups and then simply started to run upperforming players through my team until HAL found someone it liked?
The idea is that setting your line-up is one area where you can exert control because once the game begins, you have no control.
Enlighten me if I am wrong, but I think the line-ups of the players that HAL selects if you leave spots blank is an indication of nothing.