by honestiago1 » Tue Sep 27, 2005 4:03 pm
There is a newbie thread somewhere around here that will help, but as for figuring out which cards:
1) Let the player get some AB's under his belt (100 or so). Check L/R splits during season, to include power numbers, K/W ratio, etc., and make an educated guess (same with pitchers, esp. HR's, walks).
2) When a gets injured, check the roll result in the box score. This might reveal a range of cards (perhaps 3 of the 5 have "lo max + inj," for example), or perhaps even the card itself (maybe just one card has a "strikeout + inj" rating versus righties, etc.).
3) The fewer good years a player/pitcher has, the easier to spot obviously.
That said, remember that a player can have a good card but still perform beloe expectations. I had Hrbek's rookie year (.301, 23 HR's) and I had him in Wrigley (well, I'm 99% certain it was that card). With about 40 games to go, he was hitting .260 with only 16 HR's. His card was "E" (even), but he was hitting lefties much better than righties because that side had fewer BP HR's. Dude was hitting a lot of flyouts versus lefties. I needed pitching, so I dumped him. Already have enough people who hit lefties well. Actually my entire team rips lefties -- better hitting, better pitching against lefties -- markedly better. That hurt, as 66% of the pitchers are RH.
Anyway, check the newbie thread (and sorry about the tangent).