by Outta Leftfield » Wed Sep 28, 2005 10:35 pm
[quote:2fdcdc4e43]I haven't sent in my card yet. Held off to see what people thought about it. I think I'll re-examine my poitching choices, before i send it in.
I orignially built this draft before i had the knowledge of the mystery cards.[/quote:2fdcdc4e43]
Good idea to hold on to the draft until you got some advice. The key to this game is drafting high value players (worth what you paid or a little bit more), avoiding low value players, and sorting the good from the bad player cards once the season starts. The fact that you get 95% back for dropped players through game 42 gives you a lot of freedom in the opening games. Everyone in the league is trying to figure out their good years and dump their bad ones--but if they dump too quickly, you can pick up some great players that you missed in the draft. For example, I once picked up Eddie Murray when he was dumped after six games, and he hit .353 for me with 45 HR. Somebody else dumped Grich that year and he gave me 38 HR and 107 RBI. It's fun to try to snag the choice offerings from the free agent pile. One current team of mine that's cruising into the playoffs with 9 games to go has 9 players on it who were dumped by other teams--all of them are producing for me.
Most experienced managers draft, at most, one reliever over 3M (I usually don't go much over 1.5M, myself). They fill in with high value cheaper guys. If you catch a cheap reliever in a good year, that RP can become your ace. For example, I once got a 9-1, 30 save season (2.60 ERA in 104 IP) from Bill Dawley, who costs .75M. Another year I got 7-5, 35 saves (1.90 ERA in 132.2 IP) from Terry Leach, who costs 1.01M. You can't count on that every year, but if you have a handful of cheap, high value relievers, you've got a shot with each of them. Then you can spend the money you save on SP and hitting.
Also, in this league, a bad draft isn't fatal. I've had the draft from hell a couple of times and managed to produce what turned out to be successful teams through waivers and trades, and for free agent pickups both before and after the season starts.
If this is your first time out, you might want to pick a fairly neutral park like Yankee/Memorial (same stats), Veterans, Olympic or County. The other parks--strong hitter or strong pitcher--can be fun but it's a good idea to have some experience before you try them. Anyway, I avoided them until I'd managed a few seasons.
This is a great game. Welcome and have fun! :D